Estimating species distribution and abundance in river networks using environmental DNA


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Date

2018-11-13

Publication Type

Journal Article

ETH Bibliography

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Abstract

All organisms leave traces of DNA in their environment. This environmental DNA (eDNA) is often used to track occurrence patterns of target species. Applications are especially promising in rivers, where eDNA can integrate information about populations upstream. The dispersion of eDNA in rivers is modulated by complex processes of transport and decay through the dendritic river network, and we currently lack a method to extract quantitative information about the location and density of populations contributing to the eDNA signal. Here, we present a general framework to reconstruct the upstream distribution and abundance of a target species across a river network, based on observed eDNA concentrations and hydro-geomorphological features of the network. The model captures well the catchment-wide spatial biomass distribution of two target species: a sessile invertebrate (the bryozoan Fredericella sultana) and its parasite (the myxozoan Tetracapsuloides bryosalmonae). Our method is designed to easily integrate general biological and hydrological data and to enable spatially explicit estimates of the distribution of sessile and mobile species in fluvial ecosystems based on eDNA sampling.

Publication status

published

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Book title

Volume

115 (46)

Pages / Article No.

11724 - 11729

Publisher

National Academy of Sciences

Event

Edition / version

Methods

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Date collected

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Subject

Species distribution model; Ecohydrology; Proliferative kidney disease

Organisational unit

03705 - Jokela, Jukka / Jokela, Jukka check_circle

Notes

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