Field collections and environmental DNA surveys reveal topographic complexity of coral reefs as a predictor of cryptobenthic biodiversity across small spatial scales
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34871Dato
2024-05-17Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Brodnicke, O.B.; Jensen, M.R.; Thomsen, P.F.; Brorly, T.; Andersen, B.L.; Knudsen, Steen Wilhelm; Præbel, Kim; Brandl, S.J.; Sweet, M.J.; Møller, Peter Daniel Rask; Worsaae, K.Sammendrag
Coral reefs represent some of the most biodiverse ecosystems in the world but are
currently undergoing large-scale degradation due to anthropogenic stressors. Such
degradation usually begins with coral bleaching, and if the stress condition is inflicted
for too long may eventually result in loss of structural complexity (or “flattening”) of the
reef, dramatically changing habitat availability forreef-associated fauna. Despite having
been linked to important ecosystem functions, cryptobenthic organisms are often
overlooked in ecological monitoring programs, and their microhabitat dependencies
are poorly understood. Here, we combined collection-based biodiversity monitoring
techniques with five different environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling techniques (Reef
water, sediment, crevice water, slurp gun, and bulk sediment) to survey cryptobenthic
fishes and annelids on a Maldivian fringing coral reef. Collectively, 176 fish and 140
annelid taxa were detected with eDNA across 14 surveyed sites, more than doubling
the reported annelid taxa in the region with 88 new occurrences. Water filtered near
the reef structure revealed the highest species richness out of the five eDNA sampling
techniques tested. Furthermore, we found correlations between fish species richness
and topographic complexity for both collection- and eDNA-based techniques. This
suggests that detection by eDNA may be linked to site-specific predictors and reveal
community differences across small spatial scales (tens of meters). We also report
that reef flattening (going from structural complex to less complex sites) can cause
a 50% reduction in fish diversity and that cryptobenthic fish species richness was
highly associated with branching corals. In contrast, annelid communities showed no
clear correlations with environmental predictors, but co-amplification of non-target,
non-annelid taxa may have distorted such correlations if present. This suggest that
the predictive powers of eDNA for environmental gradients may be dependent on
the targeted taxa.
Forlag
WileySitering
Brodnicke, Jensen, Thomsen, Brorly, Andersen, Knudsen, Præbel, Brandl, Sweet, Møller, Worsaae. Field collections and environmental DNA surveys reveal topographic complexity of coral reefs as a predictor of cryptobenthic biodiversity across small spatial scales. Environmental DNA. 2024;6(3)Metadata
Vis full innførselSamlinger
Copyright 2024 The Author(s)