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Molecular- and pollen-based vegetation analysis in lake sediments from central Scandinavia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Molecular- and pollen-based vegetation analysis in lake sediments from central Scandinavia

L. Parducci, I. Matetovici, S.L. Fontana, K.D. Bennett, Y. Suyama, J. Haile, K.H. Kjaer, N.K. Larsen, A.D. Drouzas and E. Willerslev
Molecular Ecology, Vol.22(13), pp.3511-3524
2013
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Abstract

Plant and animal biodiversity can be studied by obtaining DNA directly from the environment. This new approach in combination with the use of generic barcoding primers (metabarcoding) has been suggested as complementary or alternative to traditional biodiversity monitoring in ancient soil sediments. However, the extent to which metabarcoding truly reflects plant composition remains unclear, as does its power to identify species with no pollen or macrofossil evidence. Here, we compared pollen-based and metabarcoding approaches to explore the Holocene plant composition around two lakes in central Scandinavia. At one site, we also compared barcoding results with those obtained in earlier studies with species-specific primers. The pollen analyses revealed a larger number of taxa (46), of which the majority (78%) was not identified by metabarcoding. The metabarcoding identified 14 taxa (MTUs), but allowed identification to a lower taxonomical level. The combined analyses identified 52 taxa. The barcoding primers may favour amplification of certain taxa, as they did not detect taxa previously identified with species-specific primers. Taphonomy and selectiveness of the primers are likely the major factors influencing these results. We conclude that metabarcoding from lake sediments provides a complementary, but not an alternative, tool to pollen analysis for investigating past flora. In the absence of other fossil evidence, metabarcoding gives a local and important signal from the vegetation, but the resulting assemblages show limited capacity to detect all taxa, regardless of their abundance around the lake. We suggest that metabarcoding is followed by pollen analysis and the use of species-specific primers to provide the most comprehensive signal from the environment.

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

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#14 Life Below Water
#15 Life on Land

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
International collaboration
Citation topics
3 Agriculture, Environment & Ecology
3.64 Phylogenetics & Genomics
3.64.2564 Environmental DNA
Web Of Science research areas
Biochemistry & Molecular Biology
Ecology
Evolutionary Biology
ESI research areas
Environment/Ecology
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