Abstract

The environmental DNA (eDNA) technique is expected to become a powerful, non-invasive tool for estimating the distribution and biomass of organisms. This technique was recently shown to be applicable to aquatic vertebrates by collecting extraorganismal DNA floating in the water or absorbed onto suspended particles. However, basic information on eDNA release rate is lacking, despite it being essential for practical applications. In this series of experiments with bluegill sunfish (Lepomis macrochirus), we examined the effect of fish developmental stage on eDNA release rate. eDNA concentration reached equilibrium 3 days after the individual fish were introduced into the separate containers, enabling calculation of the eDNA release rate (copies h−1) from individual fish on the assumption that the number of eDNA released from the fish per unit time equals total degradation in the container (copies h−1). The eDNA release rate was 3–4 times higher in the adult (body weight: 30–75 g) than in the juvenile group (0.5–2.0 g). Such positive relationship between fish size and eDNA release rate support the possibility of biomass rather than density estimation using eDNA techniques. However, the eDNA release rate per fish body weight (copies h−1 g−1) was slightly higher in the juvenile than the adult group, which is likely because of the ontogenetic reduction in metabolic activity. Therefore, quantitative eDNA data should be carefully interpreted to avoid overestimating biomass when the population is dominated by juveniles, because the age structure of the focal population is often variable and unseen in the field. eDNA degradation rates (copies l−1 h−1), calculated by curve fitting of time-dependent changes in eDNA concentrations after fish removal, were 5.1–15.9% per hour (half-life: 6.3 h). This suggests that quantitative eDNA data should be corrected using a degradation curve attained in the target field.

Highlights

  • Information on the distribution and biomass of organisms is a crucial component in understanding their ecology and forms the basis for the proper use and management of ecosystems [1]

  • Environmental DNA has been used to document the distributions of aquatic vertebrate species. environmental DNA (eDNA) is defined as extraorganismal, short, species-specific DNA fragments floating in the water or absorbed onto suspended particles

  • The eDNA concentration was highest on day 1 (5.806107¡4.926107 copies l21, mean ¡ standard deviation) and decreased gradually thereafter, with a small change between days 3 and 4 (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Information on the distribution and biomass of organisms is a crucial component in understanding their ecology and forms the basis for the proper use and management of ecosystems [1]. A precise estimation of distribution and biomass is often hindered by complex microhabitat topology and vegetation, in aquatic systems [2]. Several approaches, such as quadrat and mark-recapture methods, have been established and widely used in the environmental sciences, they are usually destructive to the focal population, laborand time-consuming, and may not be applicable to some active animals, e.g., fish. Environmental DNA (eDNA) has been used to document the distributions of aquatic vertebrate species. Presence/absence data can be used to illustrate species distribution and, in the near future, eDNA will be more frequently used to document the presence/absence of aquatic species, in detecting invasive or endangered species

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