Boyse Elizabeth, Clark Melody S, Carr Ian M, Cook Alison J, Archambault Philippe, Holloway Jean E, Luo Zhewen, Milton Michael, Roy Mathieu, Dawson Jackie, Peck Victoria L
British Antarctic Survey, Cambridge, UK.
School of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
Glob Chang Biol. 2025 Sep;31(9):e70452. doi: 10.1111/gcb.70452.
To date, environmental conditions have been enough to act as an effective barrier to prevent non-indigenous species from arriving and establishing in Arctic Canada. However, rapidly changing climatic conditions are creating more suitable habitats for non-indigenous species to potentially establish and become invasive. Concurrently, shipping traffic in parts of Arctic Canada has increased by over 250% since 1990, providing an effective vector for transporting non-indigenous species to the region. Arctic Canada has been historically undersampled, so Arctic biota inventories are incomplete, hampering efforts to establish if a species is new to the region (and potentially invasive) or newly discovered. In this study, we utilize environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding and ships of opportunity to assess eukaryotic community composition and potential invasives along one of the busiest shipping routes, the Northwest Passage. One liter seawater samples were collected in triplicate at 27 locations, targeting touristic hotspots frequently visited by passenger vessels. Eukaryotic DNA was amplified from the 18S rRNA V9 and COI regions, resulting in 126 unique Amplicon Sequence Variants (ASVs) detected with COI and 391 ASVs with 18S, providing an important snapshot of current community composition. Copepods, dinoflagellates, and diatoms were the most abundant taxonomic groups, correlating well with previous net sampler surveys, validating the efficacy of eDNA for biodiversity surveillance. We also report the first detections of a prolific invasive species, the bay barnacle (Amphibalanus improvisus), in Arctic Canada. Further work is currently in progress to establish whether these detections represent transient barnacle larvae or sessile adults capable of recruiting and reproducing. Our study demonstrates the utility of eDNA for the detection of non-indigenous species in a data-poor area, which, if combined with citizen science initiatives and local communities, could provide a vital monitoring tool for the detection of new invasives in this rapidly changing area.
迄今为止,环境条件足以成为一道有效的屏障,阻止非本地物种抵达并在加拿大北极地区立足。然而,气候条件的迅速变化正在为非本地物种创造更适宜的栖息地,使其有可能立足并成为入侵物种。与此同时,自1990年以来,加拿大北极地区部分地区的航运量增加了250%以上,为将非本地物种运输到该地区提供了一个有效的载体。加拿大北极地区在历史上采样不足,因此北极生物群清单不完整,这阻碍了确定一个物种是该地区新出现的(可能具有入侵性)还是新发现的物种的工作。在本研究中,我们利用环境DNA(eDNA)宏条形码技术和机会性船只,评估了最繁忙的航线之一——西北航道沿线的真核生物群落组成和潜在入侵物种。在27个地点采集了1升海水样本,每份样本重复采集3次,目标是客船经常光顾的旅游热点地区。从18S rRNA V9和细胞色素氧化酶亚基I(COI)区域扩增真核生物DNA,使用COI检测到126个独特的扩增子序列变体(ASV),使用18S检测到391个ASV,提供了当前群落组成的重要快照。桡足类、甲藻和硅藻是最丰富的分类群,与之前的浮游生物网采样调查结果高度相关,验证了eDNA用于生物多样性监测的有效性。我们还首次报告在加拿大北极地区检测到一种繁殖力强的入侵物种——海湾藤壶(Amphibalanus improvisus)。目前正在进行进一步的工作,以确定这些检测结果代表的是短暂的藤壶幼虫还是能够定居和繁殖的固着成虫。我们的研究证明了eDNA在数据匮乏地区检测非本地物种的实用性,如果与公民科学倡议和当地社区相结合,它可以成为检测这个快速变化地区新入侵物种的重要监测工具。