4.7 Article

DNA metabarcoding and morphological methods show complementary patterns in the metacommunity organization of lentic epiphytic diatoms

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 786, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.147410

Keywords

Diatoms; DNA barcoding; rbcL; High-Throughput Sequencing; Metacommunity

Funding

  1. project METAPONDS [CGL2017-84176R]
  2. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Industry
  3. Biodiversity Foundation
  4. Spanish Ministry for Ecological Transition and Demographic Challenge
  5. Junta of Castile and Leon [LE004G18]
  6. Supercomputing Centre of Castilla y Leon (SCAYLE).
  7. project BT-2019

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study compares the effectiveness of traditional morphological methods and DNA barcoding methods in studying diatom communities. The results show significant differences in the compositional variation of diatom metacommunities between the two approaches. Biases affecting the molecular approach may include incomplete reference databases and bioinformatics processing, while biases affecting the morphological method may be limited counting effort and the presence of cryptic species. Additionally, variation in diatom community composition is strongly related to the environmental template, but not significantly related to geographical distances.
Diatoms are important organisms in freshwater ecosystems due to their position as primary producers and therefore, analyzing their assemblages provides relevant information on ecosystem functioning. Diatoms have historically been identified based on morphological traits, which is time-consuming and requires well-trained specialists. Nevertheless, DNA barcoding offers an alternative approach to overcome some limitations of the morphological method. Here, we assess if both approaches are comparable methods to study patterns and mechanisms (including environmental filtering and dispersal limitation) of epiphytic diatom metacommunities using a comprehensive dataset from 22 Mediterranean ponds at different taxonomic resolutions. We used a fragment of rbcL barcode gene combined with High-Throughput Sequencing to infer diatom community composition. The overall degree of correspondence between both approaches was assessed by Procrustean rotation analysis and Procrustean randomization tests, whereas the role of local environmental variables and geographical distances was studied using a comprehensive combination of BIOENV, Mantel tests and distance-based redundancy analysis. Our results showed a relatively poor correspondence in the compositional variation of diatom metacommunity between both approaches. We speculate that the incompleteness of the reference database and the bioinformatics processing are the biases most likely affecting the molecular approach, whereas the limited counting effort and the presence of cryptic species are presumably the major biases related with the morphological method. On the other hand, variation in diatom community composition detected with both approaches was strongly related to the environmental template, which may be related with the narrow communityenvironment relationships in diatoms. Nevertheless, we found no significant relationship between compositional variation and geographical distances. Overall, our work shows the complementary nature of both approaches and highlights the importance of DNA metabarcoding to address empirical research questions of community ecology in freshwaters, especially once the reference databases include most genotypes of occurring taxa and bioinformatics biases are overcome. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available