Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Marine Biodiversity, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Department of Environmental Biology, Institute of Environmental Sciences (CML), Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands.
Mol Ecol Resour. 2024 Oct;24(7):e13997. doi: 10.1111/1755-0998.13997. Epub 2024 Jul 31.
Molecular techniques like metabarcoding, while promising for exploring diversity of communities, are often impeded by the lack of reference DNA sequences available for taxonomic annotation. Our study explores the benefits of combining targeted DNA barcoding and morphological taxonomy to improve metabarcoding efficiency, using beach meiofauna as a case study. Beaches are globally important ecosystems and are inhabited by meiofauna, microscopic animals living in the interstitial space between the sand grains, which play a key role in coastal biodiversity and ecosystem dynamics. However, research on meiofauna faces challenges due to limited taxonomic expertise and sparse sampling. We generated 775 new cytochrome c oxidase I DNA barcodes from meiofauna specimens collected along the Netherlands' west coast and combined them with the NCBI GenBank database. We analysed alpha and beta diversity in 561 metabarcoding samples from 24 North Sea beaches, a region extensively studied for meiofauna, using both the enriched reference database and the NCBI database without the additional reference barcodes. Our results show a 2.5-fold increase in sequence annotation and a doubling of species-level Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) identification when annotating the metabarcoding data with the enhanced database. Additionally, our analyses revealed a bell-shaped curve of OTU richness across the intertidal zone, aligning more closely with morphological analysis patterns, and more defined community dissimilarity patterns between supralittoral and intertidal sites. Our research highlights the importance of expanding molecular reference databases and combining morphological taxonomy with molecular techniques for biodiversity assessments, ultimately improving our understanding of coastal ecosystems.
分子技术,如代谢条形码技术,虽然在探索群落多样性方面具有广阔的前景,但往往受到可用的分类注释参考 DNA 序列缺乏的阻碍。我们的研究通过以海滩小型后生动物为案例研究,探索了结合靶向 DNA 条形码和形态分类学来提高代谢条形码效率的益处。海滩是全球重要的生态系统,栖息着小型后生动物,即生活在沙粒间隙中的微观动物,它们在沿海生物多样性和生态系统动态中起着关键作用。然而,由于分类学专业知识有限和采样稀疏,小型后生动物的研究面临挑战。我们从荷兰西海岸采集的小型后生动物标本中生成了 775 个新的细胞色素 c 氧化酶 I DNA 条形码,并将其与 NCBI GenBank 数据库相结合。我们使用经过丰富的参考数据库和没有额外参考条形码的 NCBI 数据库,对来自 24 个北海海滩的 561 个代谢条形码样本进行了 alpha 和 beta 多样性分析,这些海滩是小型后生动物的广泛研究区域。我们的研究结果表明,当使用增强后的数据库注释代谢条形码数据时,序列注释增加了 2.5 倍,物种水平的操作分类单元(OTU)识别增加了一倍。此外,我们的分析揭示了潮间带 OTU 丰富度呈钟形曲线,与形态分析模式更吻合,并且潮上带和潮间带之间的群落差异模式更加明确。我们的研究强调了扩大分子参考数据库的重要性,并将形态分类学与分子技术相结合,用于生物多样性评估,最终提高我们对沿海生态系统的理解。