4.7 Article

Comparison of materials for rapid passive collection of environmental DNA

Journal

MOLECULAR ECOLOGY RESOURCES
Volume 22, Issue 7, Pages 2559-2572

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1755-0998.13640

Keywords

biotechnology; DNA barcoding; environmental DNA; fish

Funding

  1. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Passive collection is an emerging sampling method for environmental DNA (eDNA) in aquatic systems. This study compares the effectiveness of nine membrane materials for passively collecting fish eDNA and finds that most materials can collect comparable amounts of eDNA and species richness to that of conventional filtering within short periods of submersion. The collected eDNA particles show a diversity in size and structure. This passive approach is cost-effective, time-efficient, and suitable for biological surveys in remote areas or with limited equipment.
Passive collection is an emerging sampling method for environmental DNA (eDNA) in aquatic systems. Passive eDNA collection is inexpensive and efficient, and requires minimal equipment, making it suited to high-density sampling and remote deployment. Here, we compare the effectiveness of nine membrane materials for passively collecting fish eDNA from a 3-million-litre marine mesocosm. We submerged materials (cellulose, cellulose with 1% and 3% chitosan, cellulose overlayed with electrospun nanofibres and 1% chitosan, cotton fibres, hemp fibres, and sponge with either zeolite or active carbon) for intervals between 5 and 1080 min. We show that for most materials, with as little as 5 min of submersion, mitochondrial fish eDNA measured with qPCR, and fish species richness measured with metabarcoding, was comparable to that collected by conventional filtering. Furthermore, PCR template DNA concentrations and species richness were generally not improved significantly by longer submersion. Species richness detected for all materials ranged between 11 and 37 species, with a median of 27, which was comparable to the range for filtered eDNA (19-32). Using scanning electron microscopy, we visualized biological matter adhering to the surface of materials, rather than entrapped, with images also revealing a diversity in size and structure of putative eDNA particles. eDNA can be collected rapidly from seawater with a passive approach and using a variety of materials. This will suit cost- and time-sensitive biological surveys, and where access to equipment is limited.

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