0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Detection Methods Environmental Sources Marine & Wildlife Sign in to save

Environmental RNA as a Tool for Marine Community Biodiversity Assessments

Scientific Reports 2022 49 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 45 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Marissa Giroux, Jay R. Reichman, Troy Langknecht, Robert M. Burgess, Kay T. Ho

Summary

This study compared environmental RNA (eRNA) and environmental DNA (eDNA) for assessing marine community biodiversity using metabarcoding, finding that eRNA captured only living organisms while eDNA also detected past occupants. Environmental RNA provided a more current snapshot of community composition and may improve ecological assessments where legacy DNA is a confounding factor.

Study Type Environmental

Microscopic organisms are often overlooked in traditional diversity assessments due to the difficulty of identifying them based on morphology. Metabarcoding is a method for rapidly identifying organisms where Environmental DNA (eDNA) is used as a template. However, legacy DNA is problematically detected from organisms no longer in the environment during sampling. Environmental RNA (eRNA), which is only produced by living organisms, can also be collected from environmental samples and used for metabarcoding. The aim of this study was to determine differences in community composition and diversity between eRNA and eDNA templates for metabarcoding. Using mesocosms containing field-collected communities from an estuary, RNA and DNA were co-extracted from sediment, libraries were prepared for two loci (18S and COI), and sequenced using an Illumina MiSeq. Results show a higher number of unique sequences detected from eRNA in both markers and higher α-diversity compared to eDNA. Significant differences between eRNA and eDNA for all β-diversity metrics were also detected. This study is the first to demonstrate community differences detected with eRNA compared to eDNA from an estuarine system and illustrates the broad applications of eRNA as a tool for assessing benthic community diversity, particularly for environmental conservation and management applications.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Using eRNA/eDNA metabarcoding to detect community-level impacts of nanoplastic exposure to benthic estuarine ecosystems

Researchers used environmental DNA and RNA metabarcoding to detect community-level impacts of nanoplastic exposure on benthic estuarine organisms in marine sediments. The study suggests that molecular methods offer a powerful approach for assessing how nanoplastic contamination affects the diversity and composition of ecologically important microscopic organisms in marine food webs.

Article Tier 2

Exploitation of environmental DNA (eDNA) for ecotoxicological research: A critical review on eDNA metabarcoding in assessing marine pollution

This review examines how environmental DNA (eDNA) analysis -- a method that detects organisms through DNA traces left in water -- can be used to monitor the effects of marine pollution, including plastic waste. While eDNA does not detect plastics directly, it reveals how pollution changes the biodiversity of marine communities, serving as an early warning system. The approach could help scientists better track the ecological damage caused by microplastic contamination in oceans.

Article Tier 2

Environmental DNA in an Ocean of Change: Status, Challenges and Prospects

This review examines the status, challenges, and prospects of environmental DNA (eDNA) research in marine systems, surveying literature on metazoan eDNA studies to assess progress in detecting species distributions, biodiversity, and biomass, and highlighting future opportunities including marine time series, population genetics, natural sampler DNA, and eDNA-based trophic network reconstruction.

Article Tier 2

Dead or Alive? Challenges in Discriminating Dietary From Host‐Associated Community via RNA and DNA Metabarcoding in a Filter Feeder

Researchers investigated challenges in separating dietary genetic signatures from host-associated microbial and parasitic communities in environmental DNA metabarcoding of filter-feeding organisms such as mussels and sponges. They found that continuous filter feeding causes these organisms to accumulate environmental DNA from ingested taxa, making it difficult to distinguish living endobiotic community members from transient dietary DNA — a problem with broad implications for environmental DNA-based biodiversity monitoring.

Article Tier 2

Forensics Meets Ecology – Environmental DNA Offers New Capabilities for Marine Ecosystem and Fisheries Research

This review describes how environmental DNA (eDNA) tools are expanding capabilities for marine ecosystem monitoring and fisheries research, enabling non-invasive detection of species presence, biodiversity assessment, and tracking of human impacts across large ocean areas.

Share this paper