Abstract

AbstractAimEnvironmental DNA metabarcoding has recently emerged as a non‐invasive tool for aquatic biodiversity inventories, frequently surpassing traditional methods for detecting a wide range of taxa in most habitats. The major limitation currently impairing the large‐scale application of eDNA‐based inventories is the lack of species sequences available in public genetic databases. Unfortunately, these gaps are still unknown spatially and taxonomically, hindering targeted future sequencing efforts.InnovationWe propose GAPeDNA, a user‐friendly web interface that provides a global overview of genetic database completeness for a given taxon across space and conservation status. As an application, we synthetized data from regional checklists for marine and freshwater fishes along with their IUCN conservation status to provide global maps of species coverage using the European Nucleotide Archive public reference database for 19 metabarcoding primers. This tool automatizes the scanning of gaps in these databases to guide future sequencing efforts and support the deployment of eDNA inventories at larger scale. This tool is flexible and can be expanded to other taxa and primers upon data availability.Main conclusionsUsing our global fish case study, we show that gaps increase towards the tropics where species diversity and the number of threatened species are the highest. It highlights priority areas for fish sequencing like the Congo, the Mekong and the Mississippi freshwater basins which host more than 60 non‐sequenced threatened fish species. For marine fishes, the Caribbean and East Africa host up to 42 non‐sequenced threatened species. By presenting the global genetic database completeness for several primers on any taxa and building an open‐access, updatable and flexible tool, GAPeDNA appears as a valuable contribution to support any kind of eDNA metabarcoding study.

Highlights

  • BIODIVERSITY METHODSGAPeDNA: Assessing and mapping global species gaps in genetic databases for eDNA metabarcoding

  • Aquatic ecosystems are increasingly impacted by human activities, threatening their biodiversity and causing major disruptions in their functioning (Cinner et al, 2016; Link & Watson, 2019; Reid et al, 2019)

  • Exogenous DNA released by animals in the environment, through shed skin, mucus or faeces, can be retrieved by filtering water and amplified via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using universal primers (Ficetola, Miaud, Pompanon, & Taberlet, 2008)

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Summary

BIODIVERSITY METHODS

GAPeDNA: Assessing and mapping global species gaps in genetic databases for eDNA metabarcoding. Virginie Marques1,2 | Tristan Milhau3 | Camille Albouy4 | Tony Dejean3 | Stéphanie Manel2 | David Mouillot1,5 | Jean-Baptiste Juhel. Funding information ANR-BiodivERsA; ANR-BiodivERsA, Grant/ Award Number: RESERVEBENEFIT

| INTRODUCTION
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Findings
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