Andrés Jose, Czechowski Paul, Grey Erin, Saebi Mandana, Andres Kara, Brown Christopher, Chawla Nitesh, Corbett James J, Brys Rein, Cassey Phillip, Correa Nancy, Deveney Marty R, Egan Scott P, Fisher Joshua P, Vanden Hooff Rian, Knapp Charles R, Leong Sandric Chee Yew, Neilson Brian J, Paolucci Esteban M, Pfrender Michael E, Pochardt Meredith R, Prowse Thomas A A, Rumrill Steven S, Scianni Chris, Sylvester Francisco, Tamburri Mario N, Therriault Thomas W, Yeo Darren C J, Lodge David M
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Cornell Atkinson Center for Sustainability, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2023 Dec;32(23):6696-6709. doi: 10.1111/mec.16888. Epub 2023 Mar 28.
The spread of nonindigenous species by shipping is a large and growing global problem that harms coastal ecosystems and economies and may blur coastal biogeographical patterns. This study coupled eukaryotic environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding with dissimilarity regression to test the hypothesis that ship-borne species spread homogenizes port communities. We first collected and metabarcoded water samples from ports in Europe, Asia, Australia and the Americas. We then calculated community dissimilarities between port pairs and tested for effects of environmental dissimilarity, biogeographical region and four alternative measures of ship-borne species transport risk. We predicted that higher shipping between ports would decrease community dissimilarity, that the effect of shipping would be small compared to that of environment dissimilarity and shared biogeography, and that more complex shipping risk metrics (which account for ballast water and stepping-stone spread) would perform better. Consistent with our hypotheses, community dissimilarities increased significantly with environmental dissimilarity and, to a lesser extent, decreased with ship-borne species transport risks, particularly if the ports had similar environments and stepping-stone risks were considered. Unexpectedly, we found no clear effect of shared biogeography, and that risk metrics incorporating estimates of ballast discharge did not offer more explanatory power than simpler traffic-based risks. Overall, we found that shipping homogenizes eukaryotic communities between ports in predictable ways, which could inform improvements in invasive species policy and management. We demonstrated the usefulness of eDNA metabarcoding and dissimilarity regression for disentangling the drivers of large-scale biodiversity patterns. We conclude by outlining logistical considerations and recommendations for future studies using this approach.
航运导致的非本土物种扩散是一个规模庞大且不断加剧的全球性问题,它损害沿海生态系统和经济,还可能模糊沿海生物地理格局。本研究将真核生物环境DNA(eDNA)宏条形码技术与差异回归相结合,以检验船舶携带物种扩散使港口群落同质化这一假设。我们首先从欧洲、亚洲、澳大利亚和美洲的港口采集水样并进行宏条形码分析。然后,我们计算了港口对之间的群落差异,并测试了环境差异、生物地理区域以及船舶携带物种运输风险的四种替代指标的影响。我们预测,港口之间更高的航运量会降低群落差异,与环境差异和共享生物地理学相比,航运的影响会较小,并且更复杂的航运风险指标(考虑压载水和踏脚石式扩散)表现会更好。与我们的假设一致,群落差异随着环境差异显著增加,并且在较小程度上随着船舶携带物种运输风险而降低,特别是当港口环境相似且考虑踏脚石风险时。出乎意料的是,我们没有发现共享生物地理学有明显影响,并且纳入压载水排放估计值的风险指标并没有比基于简单运输量的风险提供更多的解释力。总体而言,我们发现航运以可预测的方式使港口之间的真核生物群落同质化,这可为入侵物种政策和管理的改进提供参考。我们证明了eDNA宏条形码技术和差异回归在厘清大规模生物多样性格局驱动因素方面的有用性。我们最后概述了使用这种方法进行未来研究的后勤考虑因素和建议。