Abstract
Environmental DNA (eDNA) and invertebrate-derived DNA (iDNA) have been
increasingly recognized as a powerful tool for biodiversity assessment
and conservation management. However, because of uncertainties on the
efficiency of eDNA/iDNA approach in comparison to conventional methods,
its use to assess the vertebrate diversity is still rare. Here we
assessed the efficiency of eDNA/iDNA in comparison to conventional
methods to survey vertebrate diversity across several type of samplers,
vertebrate groups, and location (tropical vs temperate zones), as well
as its efficiency to be used as a proxy for relative abundance or
biomass across different molecular methods (qPCR and metabarcoding) and
types of experiments (in the lab or in the field). The metanalysis
showed that, in general, there is no difference in the number of species
detected or number of sites that a target species was detected when
using eDNA/iDNA or conventional methods, suggesting that eDNA/iDNA and
conventional methods were equally efficient in characterizing the
biodiversity. However, for water sampler and fish, separately, the risk
of not finding a species was greater using conventional method than
eDNA, suggesting that eDNA/iDNA was more efficient in finding the target
species. Abundance and biomass showed similar correlation patterns, and
there was a positive correlation between eDNA/iDNA and abundance/biomass
data, suggesting that eDNA/iDNA can be used as a proxy for abundance and
biomass. Therefore, eDNA/iDNA has proved to be an efficient tool to
assess vertebrate diversity in terms of both diversity of species and
abundance or biomass.