Authors
Eva Egelyng Sigsgaard, Felipe Torquato, Tobias Guldberg Frøslev, Alec BM Moore, Johan Mølgård Sørensen, Pedro Range, Radhouane Ben‐Hamadou, Steffen Sanvig Bach, Peter Rask Møller, Philip Francis Thomsen
Publication date
2020/6
Journal
Conservation Biology
Volume
34
Issue
3
Pages
697-710
Description
Conservation and management of marine biodiversity depends on biomonitoring of marine habitats, but current approaches are resource‐intensive and require different approaches for different organisms. Environmental DNA (eDNA) extracted from water samples is an efficient and versatile approach to detecting aquatic animals. In the ocean, eDNA composition reflects local fauna at fine spatial scales, but little is known about the effectiveness of eDNA‐based monitoring of marine communities at larger scales. We investigated the potential of eDNA to characterize and distinguish marine communities at large spatial scales by comparing vertebrate species composition among marine habitats in Qatar, the Arabian Gulf (also known as the Persian Gulf), based on eDNA metabarcoding of seawater samples. We conducted species accumulation analyses to estimate how much of the vertebrate diversity we detected. We …
Total citations
20202021202220232024825162513
Scholar articles
EE Sigsgaard, F Torquato, TG Frøslev, ABM Moore… - Conservation Biology, 2020