4.4 Article

Evaluating the impacts of metabarcoding primer selection on DNA characterization of diet in an aerial insectivore, the Purple Martin

期刊

ORNITHOLOGY
卷 139, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ornithology/ukab075

关键词

aerial insectivore; ANML; barcoding primers; diet; DNA metabarcoding; ZBJ

资金

  1. Genomics & Bioinformatics Cluster of the University of Central Florida
  2. Department of Biology of the University of Central Florida

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DNA metabarcoding is commonly used to study insectivorous bird diets, with the ZBJ primer set being widely utilized. However, recent studies have shown biases in prey classification with ZBJ, prompting the evaluation of a new primer set called ANML. Through comparing the two primer sets, it was found that ANML outperformed ZBJ in terms of PCR efficacy, taxonomic coverage, and specificity of classification, but using both together provided the most comprehensive results. This study is the first to use ANML primers for avian diet metabarcoding, and the first to directly compare results with ZBJ.
DNA metabarcoding is a molecular technique frequently used to characterize diet composition of insectivorous birds. However, results are sensitive to methodological decisions made during sample processing, with primer selection being one of the most critical. The most frequently used DNA metabarcoding primer set for avian insectivores is ZBJ. However, recent studies have found that ZBJ produces significant biases in prey classification that likely influence our understanding of foraging ecology. A new primer set, ANML, has shown promise for characterizing insectivorous bat diets with fewer taxonomic biases than ZBJ, but ANML has not yet been used to study insectivorous birds. Here, we evaluate the ANML primer set for use in metabarcoding of avian insectivore diets through comparison with the more commonly used ZBJ primer set. Fecal samples were collected from both adult and nestling Purple Martins (Progne subis subis) at 2 sites in the USA and 1 site in Canada to maximize variation in diet composition and to determine if primer selection impacts our understanding of diet variation among sites. In total, we detected 71 arthropod prey species, 39 families, and 10 orders. Of these, 40 species were uniquely detected by ANML, whereas only 11 were uniquely detected by ZBJ. We were able to classify 54.8% of exact sequence variants from ANML libraries to species compared to 33.3% from ZBJ libraries. We found that ANML outperformed ZBJ for PCR efficacy, taxonomic coverage, and specificity of classification, but that using both primer sets together produced the most comprehensive characterizations of diet composition. Significant variation in both alpha- and beta-diversity between sites was found using each primer set separately and in combination. To our knowledge, this is the first published metabarcoding study using ANML primers to describe avian diet, and also the first to directly compare results returned by ANML and ZBJ primer sets.

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