Authors
Gentile F Ficetola, Johan Pansu, Aurélie Bonin, Eric Coissac, Charline Giguet‐Covex, Marta De Barba, Ludovic Gielly, Carla M Lopes, Frédéric Boyer, François Pompanon, Gilles Rayé, Pierre Taberlet
Publication date
2015/5
Journal
Molecular ecology resources
Volume
15
Issue
3
Pages
543-556
Description
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is increasingly used to study the present and past biodiversity. eDNA analyses often rely on amplification of very small quantities or degraded DNA. To avoid missing detection of taxa that are actually present (false negatives), multiple extractions and amplifications of the same samples are often performed. However, the level of replication needed for reliable estimates of the presence/absence patterns remains an unaddressed topic. Furthermore, degraded DNA and PCR/sequencing errors might produce false positives. We used simulations and empirical data to evaluate the level of replication required for accurate detection of targeted taxa in different contexts and to assess the performance of methods used to reduce the risk of false detections. Furthermore, we evaluated whether statistical approaches developed to estimate occupancy in the presence of observational …
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