Abstract

Remote polar and deepwater fish faunas are under pressure from ongoing climate change and increasing fishing effort. However, these fish communities are difficult to monitor for logistic and financial reasons. Currently, monitoring of marine fishes largely relies on invasive techniques such as bottom trawling, and on official reporting of global catches, which can be unreliable. Thus, there is need for alternative and non-invasive techniques for qualitative and quantitative oceanic fish surveys. Here we report environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding of seawater samples from continental slope depths in Southwest Greenland. We collected seawater samples at depths of 188–918 m and compared seawater eDNA to catch data from trawling. We used Illumina sequencing of PCR products to demonstrate that eDNA reads show equivalence to fishing catch data obtained from trawling. Twenty-six families were found with both trawling and eDNA, while three families were found only with eDNA and two families were found only with trawling. Key commercial fish species for Greenland were the most abundant species in both eDNA reads and biomass catch, and interpolation of eDNA abundances between sampling sites showed good correspondence with catch sizes. Environmental DNA sequence reads from the fish assemblages correlated with biomass and abundance data obtained from trawling. Interestingly, the Greenland shark (Somniosus microcephalus) showed high abundance of eDNA reads despite only a single specimen being caught, demonstrating the relevance of the eDNA approach for large species that can probably avoid bottom trawls in most cases. Quantitative detection of marine fish using eDNA remains to be tested further to ascertain whether this technique is able to yield credible results for routine application in fisheries. Nevertheless, our study demonstrates that eDNA reads can be used as a qualitative and quantitative proxy for marine fish assemblages in deepwater oceanic habitats. This relates directly to applied fisheries as well as to monitoring effects of ongoing climate change on marine biodiversity—especially in polar ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Among the effects of climate change is an increased northward dispersal of a large number of marine taxa [1,2]

  • A total of 4,412 individuals representing 49 fish species and 28 families were caught by trawling at water depths ranging from 188–918 m with a mean depth of 671 m (Table 1, Table A in S1 File)

  • We here present results that suggest a correspondence between fish density and marine environmental DNA (eDNA) sequence reads produced from Illumina high-throughput sequencing

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Summary

Introduction

Among the effects of climate change is an increased northward dispersal of a large number of marine taxa [1,2]. While a few commercial fish species are relatively well monitored by national (e.g. GINR—Greenland Institute of Natural Resources) and international agencies (e.g. ICES— International Council for the Exploration of the Sea, and NAFO—Northwest Atlantic Fisheries Organization), a large number of taxa and huge areas of ocean are almost never studied. This is mainly due to a lack of economic interests, great water depths and substrates unsuitable for bottom trawling, such as steep slopes and deepwater coral cover in Greenland [3]. Deepwater habitats are expensive to survey due to the long setting and hauling time of the trawls

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