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A Comparative Analysis of eDNA Metabarcoding and Field Surveys: Exploring Freshwater Plant Communities in Rivers
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  • Armando Espinosa Prieto,
  • Laurent Hardion,
  • Nicolas Debortoli,
  • Thibaut Bournonville,
  • Thibaut Mathot,
  • Jonathan Marescaux,
  • Etienne Chanez,
  • Cybill Staentzel,
  • Jean-Nicolas Beisel
Armando Espinosa Prieto
University of Strasbourg

Corresponding Author:armando.espinosa@live-cnrs.unistra.fr

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Laurent Hardion
University of Strasbourg
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Nicolas Debortoli
Namur Molecular Tech, CHU UCL Namur
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Thibaut Bournonville
E-BIOM SA
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Thibaut Mathot
E-BIOM SA
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Jonathan Marescaux
E-BIOM SA
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Etienne Chanez
University of Strasbourg
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Cybill Staentzel
University of Strasbourg
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Jean-Nicolas Beisel
University of Strasbourg
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Abstract

While eDNA metabarcoding holds promise as a holistic approach for assessing vegetation changes and community composition across diverse spatial and temporal scales, systematic investigations into its efficacy compared to conventional surveys remain scarce in the literature. The present study explores the differences in plant diversity retrieved with field surveys and that captured with a multi-marker eDNA metabarcoding approach (two nrDNA ITS1 and ITS2, and two cpDNA rbcL and trnL) from river water samples. The eDNA approach retrieved 46 aquatic plants (hydrophytes and helophytes) and 245 terrestrial plants, compared to 24 and 127 species identified from the field surveys. On average, eDNA samples collected immediately downstream of the survey sites retrieved 43% and 39% of the observed aquatic and terrestrial species , respectively. Discrepancies were explained by differences in the taxonomic resolution, the stochasticity of retrieving rare and elusive species, and the presence of reference sequences. We found a significant positive correlation between spatial and community distances at scales ranging 2-9 km, and identified turnover as the driving force of these differences. eDNA demonstrated sensitivity to community changes, and both approaches converge on a similar community structure. Interestingly, eDNA samples collected immediately upstream of the survey sites exhibited significant species overlap with the downstream samples (c. 100 m apart). Overall our results demonstrate that, with adequate sampling and a multi-marker approach, eDNA has the potential to approximate catchment gamma diversity while still being informative of the local flora.
Submitted to Molecular Ecology
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