Abstract

This paper describes two datasets: species occurrences, which were determined by environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding and their associated DNA sequences, originating from a research project which was carried out along the Houdong River (), Jiaoxi Township, Yilan, Taiwan. The Houdong River begins at an elevation of 860 m and flows for approximately 9 km before it empties into the Pacific Ocean. Meandering through mountains, hills, plains and alluvial valleys, this short river system is representative of the fluvial systems in Taiwan. The primary objective of this study was to determine eukaryotic species occurrences in the riverine ecosystem through the use of the eDNA analysis. The second goal was, based on the current dataset, to establish a metabarcoding eDNA data template that will be useful and replicable for all users, particularly the Taiwan community. The species occurrence data are accessible at the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) portal and its associated DNA sequences have been deposited in the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) at EMBL-EBI, respectively. A total of 12 water samples from the study yielded an average of 1.5 million reads. The subsequent species identification from the collected samples resulted in the classification of 432 Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) out of a total of 2,734. Furthermore, a total of 1,356 occurrences with taxon matches in GBIF were documented (excluding 4,941 incertae sedis, accessed 05-12-2023). These data will be of substantial importance for future species and habitat monitoring within the short river, such as assessment of biodiversity patterns across different elevations, zonations and time periods and its correlation to water quality, land uses and anthropogenic activities. Further, these datasets will be of importance for regional ecological studies, in particular the freshwater ecosystem and its status in the current global change scenarios. The datasets are the first species diversity description of the Houdong River system using either eDNA or traditional monitoring processes.

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