Environmental DNA for the surveillance of biosecurity threats in Mediterranean lagoons.

Mar Environ Res

Department of Functional Biology, C/ Julian Claveria s/n, 33006, Oviedo, Spain; Centro Universitario para la Investigación y el Desarrollo del Agua (CUIDA), Edificio de Investigación del Campus de Mieres, University of Oviedo, C/Gonzalo Gutiérrez Quirós, s/n, 33600, Mieres, Spain.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Invasive species and toxic algae are threatening marine resources in the Gulf of Lion, affecting fisheries, aquaculture, and tourism.
  • The study analyzed communities in six protected lagoons using eDNA metabarcoding, identifying 15 genera linked to harmful algal blooms and seven invasive species.
  • Results indicate that human activity increases the presence of these species, highlighting the need for routine eDNA monitoring and timely management actions to protect fragile marine ecosystems.

Article Abstract

Invasive species that outcompete endemic ones and toxic harmful algae that cause algal blooms threaten marine resources like fisheries, aquaculture, and even tourism. Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding can help as a method for early alert. In this study, we have analyzed communities inhabiting six lagoons within the Gulf of Lion (northwest Mediterranean Sea) with spatial protection as RAMSAR and Natura 2000 sites. Employing the COI gene as the only metabarcode, we found 15 genera that have caused recognized algal bloom outbreaks in the studied lagoons since 2000. In addition, seven alien invasive species that can pose risks to the rich marine resources of the zone and lagoons were also found. The results found from eDNA are consistent with events of toxic algae blooms before and after the sampling moment and with reported occurrences of the invasive species in nearby Mediterranean areas. Multivariate multiple analysis showed the importance of anthropic pressure in the abundance of these nuisance species. Mitigation actions and routine eDNA metabarcoding in zones of special interest like these fragile French Mediterranean lagoons are recommended for early alert of nuisance species in order to plan timely management actions.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.marenvres.2024.106601DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

invasive species
12
environmental dna
8
mediterranean lagoons
8
marine resources
8
edna metabarcoding
8
early alert
8
nuisance species
8
lagoons
5
species
5
dna surveillance
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!