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Biodiversity inventories in high gear: DNA barcoding facilitates a rapid biotic survey of a temperate nature reserve

  • Angela Telfer
  • , Monica Young
  • , Jenna Quinn
  • , Kate Perez
  • , Crystal Sobel
  • , Jayme Sones
  • , Valerie Levesque-Beaudin
  • , Rachael Derbyshire
  • , Jose Fernandez-Triana
  • , Rodolphe Rougerie
  • , Abinah Thevanayagam
  • , Adrian Boskovic
  • , Alex Borisenko
  • , Alex Cadel
  • , Allison Brown
  • , Anais Pages
  • , Anibal Castillo
  • , Annegret Nicolai
  • , Barb Mockford
  • , Glenn Mockford
  • Belén Bukowski, Bill Wilson, Brock Trojahn, Carole Ann Lacroix, Chris Brimblecombe, Christoper Hay, Christmas Ho, Claudia Steinke, Connor Warne, Cristina Cortes, Daniel Engelking, Danielle Wright, Dario Lijtmaer, David Gascoigne, David Martich, Derek Morningstar, Dirk Neumann, Dirk Steinke, Donna DeBruin, Marco DeBruin, Dylan Dobias, Elizabeth Sears, Ellen Richard, Emily Damstra, Evgeny Zakharov, Frederic Laberge, Gemma Collins, Gergin Blagoev, Gerrie Grainge, Graham Ansell, Greg Meredith, Ian Hogg, Jaclyn McKeown, Janet Topan, Jason Bracey, Jerry Guenther, Jesse Sills-Gilligan, Joseph Addesi, Joshua Persi, Kara Layton, Kareina D'Souza, Kencho Dorji, Kevin Grundy, Kirsti Nghidinwa, Kylee Ronnenberg, Kyung Min Lee, Linxi Xie, Liuqiong Lu, Lyubomir Penev, Mailyn Gonzalez, Margaret Rosati, Mari Eveliina Kekkonen, Maria Kuzmina, Marianne Iskandar, Marko Mutanen, Maryam Fatahi, Miriam Bauman, Nadya Nikolova, Mikko Pentinsaari, Natalia Ivanova, Nathaniel Jones, Nimalka Weerasuriya, Norman Monkhouse, Pablo Lavinia, Paul Jannetta, Priscila Hanisch, R. Troy McMullin, Rafael Flores, Raphaëlle Mouttet, Reid Vender, Renee Labbee, Robert Forsyth, Rob Lauder, Ross Dickson, Ruth Kroft, Scott Miller, Shannon MacDonald, Sishir Panthi, Stephanie Pedersen, Stephanie Sobek-Swant, Suresh Naik, Tatsiana Lipinskaya, Thanushi Eagalle, Thibaud Decaëns, Thibault Kosuth, Thomas Braukmann, Tom Woodcock, Tomas Valter Roslin, Tony Zammit, Victoria Campbell, Vlad Dinca, Vlada Peneva, Paul Hebert, Jeremy deWaard

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract


Background


Comprehensive biotic surveys, or ‘all taxon biodiversity inventories’ (ATBI), have traditionally been limited in scale or scope due to the complications surrounding specimen sorting and species identification. To circumvent these issues, several ATBI projects have successfully integrated DNA barcoding into their identification procedures and witnessed acceleration in their surveys and subsequent increase in project scope and scale. The Biodiversity Institute of Ontario partnered with the rare Charitable Research Reserve and delegates of the 6th International Barcode of Life Conference to complete its own rapid, barcode-assisted ATBI of an established land trust in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada.


New information


The existing species inventory for the rare Charitable Research Reserve was rapidly expanded by integrating a DNA barcoding workflow with two surveying strategies – a comprehensive sampling scheme over four months, followed by a one-day bioblitz involving international taxonomic experts. The two surveys resulted in 25,287 and 3,502 specimens barcoded, respectively, as well as 127 human observations. This barcoded material, all vouchered at the Biodiversity Institute of Ontario collection, covers 14 phyla, 29 classes, 117 orders, and 531 families of animals, plants, fungi, and lichens. Overall, the ATBI documented 1,102 new species records for the nature reserve, expanding the existing long-term inventory by 49%. In addition, 2,793 distinct Barcode Index Numbers (BINs) were assigned to genus or higher level taxonomy, and represent additional species that will be added once their taxonomy is resolved. For the 3,502 specimens, the collection, sequence analysis, taxonomic assignment, data release and manuscript submission by 100+ co-authors all occurred in less than one week. This demonstrates the speed at which barcode-assisted inventories can be completed and the utility that barcoding provides in minimizing and guiding valuable taxonomic specialist time. The final product is more than a comprehensive biotic inventory – it is also a rich dataset of fine-scale occurrence and sequence data, all archived and cross-linked in the major biodiversity data repositories. This model of rapid generation and dissemination of essential biodiversity data could be followed to conduct regional assessments of biodiversity status and change, and potentially be employed for evaluating progress towards the Aichi Targets of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011–2020.
Original languageEnglish
Article numbere6313
JournalBiodiversity Data Journal
Volume3
Number of pages176
ISSN1314-2828
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Aug 2015
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 1181 Ecology, evolutionary biology
  • 1184 Genetics, developmental biology, physiology

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