Abstract

The advancements in sequencing technologies have promoted the generation of molecular data for cataloguing and describing biodiversity. The analysis of environmental DNA (eDNA) through the application of metabarcoding techniques enables comprehensive descriptions of communities and their function, being fundamental for understanding and preserving biodiversity. Metabarcoding is becoming widely used and standard methods are being generated for a growing range of applications with high scalability. The generated data can be made available in its unprocessed form, as raw data (the sequenced reads) or as interpreted data, including sets of sequences derived after bioinformatics processing (Amplicon Sequence Variants (ASVs) or Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs)) and occurrence tables (tables that describe the occurrences and abundances of species or OTUs/ASVs). However, for this data to be Findable, Accessible, Interoperable and Reusable (FAIR), and therefore fully available for meaningful interpretation, it needs to be deposited in public repositories together with enriched sample metadata, protocols and analysis workflows (ten Hoopen et al. 2017). Metabarcoding raw data and associated sample metadata is often stored and made available through the International Nucleotide Sequence Database Collaboration (INSDC) archives (Arita et al. 2020), of which the European Nucleotide Archive (ENA, Burgin et al. 2022) is its European database, but it is often deposited with minimal information, which hinders data reusability. Within the scope of the Horizon 2020 project, Biodiversity Community Integrated Knowledge Library (BiCIKL), which is building a community of interconnected data for biodiversity research (Penev et al. 2022), we are working towards improving the standards for molecular ecology data sharing, developing tools to facilitate data deposition and retrieval, and linking between data types. Here we will present the ENA data model, showcasing how metabarcoding data can be shared, while providing enriched metadata, and how this data is linked with existing data in other research infrastructures in the biodiversity domain, such as the Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF), where data is deposited following the guidelines published in Abarenkov et al. (2023). We will also present the results of our recent discussions on standards for this data type and discuss future plans towards continuing to improve data sharing and interoperability for molecular ecology.

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