Darling John A, Frederick Raymond M
National Exposure Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA.
National Risk Management Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Edison, NJ, USA.
J Sea Res. 2018 Mar;133:43-52. doi: 10.1016/j.seares.2017.02.005.
Understanding the risks of biological invasion posed by ballast water-whether in the context of compliance testing, routine monitoring, or basic research-is fundamentally an exercise in biodiversity assessment, and as such should take advantage of the best tools available for tackling that problem. The past several decades have seen growing application of genetic methods for the study of biodiversity, driven in large part by dramatic technological advances in nucleic acids analysis. Monitoring approaches based on such methods have the potential to increase dramatically sampling throughput for biodiversity assessments, and to improve on the sensitivity, specificity, and taxonomic accuracy of traditional approaches. The application of targeted detection tools (largely focused on PCR but increasingly incorporating novel probe-based methodologies) has led to a paradigm shift in rare species monitoring, and such tools have already been applied for early detection in the context of ballast water surveillance. Rapid improvements in community profiling approaches based on high throughput sequencing (HTS) could similarly impact broader efforts to catalogue biodiversity present in ballast tanks, and could provide novel opportunities to better understand the risks of biotic exchange posed by ballast water transport-and the effectiveness of attempts to mitigate those risks. These various approaches still face considerable challenges to effective implementation, depending on particular management or research needs. Compliance testing, for instance, remains dependent on accurate quantification of viable target organisms; while tools based on RNA detection show promise in this context, the demands of such testing require considerable additional investment in methods development. In general surveillance and research contexts, both targeted and community-based approaches are still limited by various factors: quantification remains a challenge (especially for taxa in larger size classes), gaps in nucleic acids reference databases are still considerable, uncertainties in taxonomic assignment methods persist, and many applications have not yet matured sufficiently to offer standardized methods capable of meeting rigorous quality assurance standards. Nevertheless, the potential value of these tools, their growing utilization in biodiversity monitoring, and the rapid methodological advances over the past decade all suggest that they should be seriously considered for inclusion in the ballast water surveillance toolkit.
了解压舱水带来的生物入侵风险——无论是在合规测试、常规监测还是基础研究的背景下——从根本上来说都是一项生物多样性评估工作,因此应该利用现有的最佳工具来解决这一问题。在过去几十年里,遗传方法在生物多样性研究中的应用日益广泛,这在很大程度上得益于核酸分析技术的巨大进步。基于此类方法的监测方法有可能大幅提高生物多样性评估的采样通量,并提高传统方法的灵敏度、特异性和分类准确性。靶向检测工具(主要集中在聚合酶链反应,但越来越多地采用基于新型探针的方法)的应用已导致稀有物种监测发生了范式转变,此类工具已应用于压舱水监测中的早期检测。基于高通量测序(HTS)的群落分析方法的快速改进同样可能影响更广泛的努力,以编目压舱水中存在的生物多样性,并可能提供新的机会,以更好地了解压舱水运输带来的生物交换风险以及减轻这些风险的尝试的有效性。根据特定的管理或研究需求,这些不同的方法在有效实施方面仍面临相当大挑战。例如,合规测试仍然依赖于对存活目标生物的准确量化;虽然基于RNA检测的工具在这方面显示出前景,但此类测试的要求需要在方法开发方面进行大量额外投资。在一般监测和研究背景下,靶向方法和基于群落的方法仍受到各种因素的限制:量化仍然是一个挑战(特别是对于较大尺寸类别的分类群),核酸参考数据库中的差距仍然相当大,分类分配方法中的不确定性仍然存在,而且许多应用尚未充分成熟,无法提供能够满足严格质量保证标准的标准化方法。尽管如此,这些工具的潜在价值、它们在生物多样性监测中日益增加的使用以及过去十年中快速的方法学进展都表明,应认真考虑将它们纳入压舱水监测工具包。