Document of bibliographic reference 392854

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
The Tree of Life eDNA metabarcoding reveals a similar taxonomic richness but dissimilar evolutionary lineages between seaports and marine reserves
Abstract
Coastal areas host a major part of marine biodiversity but are seriously threatened by ever-increasing human pressures. Transforming natural coastlines into urban seascapes through habitat artificialization may result in loss of biodiversity and key ecosystem functions. Yet, the extent to which seaports differ from nearby natural habitats and marine reserves across the whole Tree of Life is still unknown. This study aimed to assess the level of α and β-diversity between seaports and reserves, and whether these biodiversity patterns are conserved across taxa and evolutionary lineages. For that, we used environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding to survey six seaports on the French Mediterranean coast and four strictly no-take marine reserves nearby. By targeting four different groups—prokaryotes, eukaryotes, metazoans and fish—with appropriate markers, we provide a holistic view of biodiversity on contrasted habitats. In the absence of comprehensive reference databases, we used bioinformatic pipelines to gather similar sequences into molecular operational taxonomic units (MOTUs). In contrast to our expectations, we obtained no difference in MOTU richness (α-diversity) between habitats except for prokaryotes and threatened fishes with higher diversity in reserves than in seaports. However, we observed a marked dissimilarity (β-diversity) between seaports and reserves for all taxa. Surprisingly, this biodiversity signature of seaports was preserved across the Tree of Life, up to the order. This result reveals that seaports and nearby marine reserves share few taxa and evolutionary lineages along urbanized coasts and suggests major differences in terms of ecosystem functioning between both habitats.
Bibliographic citation
Macé, B.; Mouillot, D.; Dalongeville, A.; Bruno, M.; Deter, J.; Varenne, A.; Gudefin, A.; Boissery, P.; Manel, S. (2024). The Tree of Life eDNA metabarcoding reveals a similar taxonomic richness but dissimilar evolutionary lineages between seaports and marine reserves. Mol. Ecol. 33(12). https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17373
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Bastien Macé
author
Name
David Mouillot
author
Name
Alicia Dalongeville
author
Name
Morgane Bruno
author
Name
Julie Deter
author
Name
Alix Varenne
author
Name
Anaïs Gudefin
author
Name
Pierre Boissery
author
Name
Stéphanie Manel

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mec.17373

geographic terms

geographic terms associated with this publication
MED, Mediterranean

Document metadata

date created
2024-06-24
date modified
2024-06-24