Abstract

Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis provides an efficient and objective approach for monitoring and assessing ecological status; however, studies on the eDNA of aquatic insects, such as Ephemeroptera, Plecoptera, and Trichoptera (EPT), are limited despite its potential as a useful indicator of river health. Here, we investigated the community structures of aquatic insects using eDNA and evaluated the applicability of eDNA data for calculating assessment indices. Field surveys were conducted to sample river water for eDNA at six locations from upstream to downstream of two rivers in Japan in July and November 2016. Simultaneously, aquatic insects were collected using the traditional Surber net survey method. The communities of aquatic insects were revealed using eDNA by targeting the cytochrome oxidase subunit I gene in mitochondrial DNA via metabarcoding analyses. As a result, the eDNA revealed 63 families and 75 genera of aquatic insects, which was double than that detected by the Surber net survey (especially for families in Diptera and Hemiptera). The seasonal differences of communities were distinguished by both the eDNA and Surber net survey data. Furthermore, the total nitrogen concentration, a surrogate of organic pollution, showed positive correlations with biotic environmental assessment indices (i.e., EPT index and Chironomidae index) calculated using eDNA at the genus-level resolution but the indices calculated using the Surber net survey data. Our results demonstrated that eDNA analysis with higher taxonomic resolution can provide as a more sensitive environmental assessment index than the traditional method that requires biotic samples.

Highlights

  • Stream ecosystems are threatened by global climate changes and anthropogenic impacts, including damming, water abstraction and land-use changes (WWF, 2016)

  • The community structure of aquatic insects revealed by Environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis A total of 1,235,176 sequences (50,728–168,413 sequences/sample) passed the sequence quality filter (Table S2 for the detail of metabarcoding outputs)

  • After a BLAST search, we found that 8.0% of the total sequences were assigned to aquatic insects at the family level and only 4.1% of them were assigned at the genus level (Table S2)

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Summary

Introduction

Stream ecosystems are threatened by global climate changes and anthropogenic impacts, including damming, water abstraction and land-use changes (WWF, 2016). For sustainable development and resource use of freshwater, there is a need to effectively manage stream environments, which requires effective methods and indicators to measure and assess environmental impacts. Aquatic insects are commonly used as indicators of environmental health due to their high sensitivity to deterioration of water quality. How to cite this article Uchida N, Kubota K, Aita S, Kazama S. Aquatic insect community structure revealed by eDNA metabarcoding derives indices for environmental assessment.

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