Litcius/Paper detail

Validating metabarcoding-based biodiversity assessments with multi-species occupancy models: A case study using coastal marine eDNA

Beverly McClenaghan, Zacchaeus G. Compson, Mehrdad Hajibabaei

2020PLoS ONE55 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is an increasingly popular method for rapid biodiversity assessment. As with any ecological survey, false negatives can arise during sampling and, if unaccounted for, lead to biased results and potentially misdiagnosed environmental assessments. We developed a multi-scale, multi-species occupancy model for the analysis of community biodiversity data resulting from eDNA metabarcoding; this model accounts for imperfect detection and additional sources of environmental and experimental variation. We present methods for model assessment and model comparison and demonstrate how these tools improve the inferential power of eDNA metabarcoding data using a case study in a coastal, marine environment. Using occupancy models to account for factors often overlooked in the analysis of eDNA metabarcoding data will dramatically improve ecological inference, sampling design, and methodologies, empowering practitioners with an approach to wield the high-resolution biodiversity data of next-generation sequencing platforms.

Topics & Concepts

Environmental DNAOccupancyBiodiversitySampling (signal processing)EcologyEnvironmental resource managementInferenceSampling designEnvironmental dataBiologyEnvironmental scienceComputer scienceArtificial intelligencePopulationSociologyDemographyFilter (signal processing)Computer visionEnvironmental DNA in Biodiversity StudiesMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyIdentification and Quantification in Food