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Leech blood-meal invertebrate-derived DNA reveals differences in Bornean mammal diversity across habitats.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Article

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Abstract

The application of metabarcoding to environmental and invertebrate-derived DNA (eDNA and iDNA) is a new and increasingly applied method for monitoring biodiversity across a diverse range of habitats. This approach is particularly promising for sampling in the biodiverse humid tropics, where rapid land-use change for agriculture means there is a growing need to understand the conservation value of the remaining mosaic and degraded landscapes. Here we use iDNA from blood-feeding leeches (Haemadipsa picta) to assess differences in mammalian diversity across a gradient of forest degradation in Sabah, Malaysian Borneo. We screened 557 individual leeches for mammal DNA by targeting fragments of the 16S rRNA gene and detected 14 mammalian genera. We recorded lower mammal diversity in the most heavily degraded forest compared to higher quality twice logged forest. Although the accumulation curves of diversity estimates were comparable across these habitat types, diversity was higher in twice logged forest, with more taxa of conservation concern. In addition, our analysis revealed differences between the community recorded in the heavily logged forest and that of the twice logged forest. By revealing differences in mammal diversity across a human-modified tropical landscape, our study demonstrates the value of iDNA as a noninvasive biomonitoring approach in conservation assessments.

Description

Keywords

Borneo, Haemadipsidae, biodiversity, invertebrate-derived DNA, land-use change, molecular biomonitoring, Animals, Biodiversity, Borneo, Conservation of Natural Resources, DNA, Ecosystem, Forests, Humans, Leeches, Malaysia, Mammals, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S

Journal Title

Mol Ecol

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0962-1083
1365-294X

Volume Title

30

Publisher

Wiley
Sponsorship
Natural Environment Research Council (NE/K016148/1, NE/S01537X/1)