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The maturing relationship between Quaternary paleoecology and ancient sedimentary DNA

Mary E. Edwards

2020Quaternary Research43 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In the two decades or so since ancient sedimentary DNA ( sed aDNA) took its place as a new Quaternary paleo-proxy, there have been large advances in the scope of its applications and its reliability. The two main approaches, metabarcoding and shotgun sequencing, have contributed exciting insights into areas such as floristic diversity change, plant-herbivore interactions, extinction, conservation baselines and impacts of invasive species. Early doubts as to its potential to contribute novel information have been dispelled; more is now understood about the passage of sed aDNA from the original organism to a component of soil or sediment and about the range of uncertainties that must be addressed in the interpretation of data. With its move into the mainstream, it is now time to develop effective data archives for sed aDNA, refine our understanding of central issues such as taphonomy, and further expand the potential for describing, both qualitatively and quantitatively, the history of past ecosystems.

Topics & Concepts

Ancient DNAPaleoecologyTaphonomyQuaternaryPaleontologyGeologic recordSedimentary rockGeologyEcologyBiologyDemographySociologyPopulationEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity StudiesGeology and Paleoclimatology ResearchSpecies Distribution and Climate Change
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