Catching small fish in a big pond: targeted vs untargeted sequencing for
marine eukaryotic eDNA
Abstract
Marker gene sequencing or “metabarcoding” is the primary sequencing
approach currently used for molecular biodiversity surveys, but this
approach is taxonomically limited and hampered by amplification biases.
Shotgun metagenomes offer a PCR–free approach to environmental DNA
(eDNA) sequencing, theoretically capturing the full taxonomic breadth of
the eDNA pool. However, eukaryotic DNA is often a small component of
metagenomes and it has seen limited use for metazoan biodiversity
surveys. Here, we compare metabarcoding and shotgun metagenomes on a
large (>200 sample size) set of marine water column eDNA
samples and show that metagenomes can provide biodiversity information
comparable to that of metabarcoding surveys. Moreover, as a result of
biases in reference database composition, shotgun sequencing can
outperform marker genes for certain taxa. Taxonomic database gaps remain
an obstacle to accurate and comprehensive biodiversity surveys for both
metabarcoding and shotgun metagenomes. We provide examples of taxa that
may benefit from one approach over another and highlight cases of
metagenomic utility.