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What does live in tree canopies? Researchers’ knowledge is scarce, as the habitat of these high-altitude residents is difficult to access. Biologists at the University of Duisburg-Essen (UDE) have now tested and published a method that makes it fairly easy to take samples from tree canopies. The weather plays a key role in this process.
Tree-climbing, cranes, chemical knockdown – collecting samples from the canopies used to be very time-consuming. Scientists from the UDE's working group "Aquatic Ecosystem Research" led by Prof. Dr. Florian Leese now had a brilliant idea: Shortly before a forecast downpour, they placed four rain samplers beneath oaks, beeches, pines, and larches in the Diersfordter Wald and in the Großer Veen on the Lower Rhine region.
In addition to entire microorganisms and small invertebrates, the collected water also contained environmental DNA (eDNA): genetic information from organisms in the environment that was released through abrasion or excretion for instance.
This mixture of beetle, fungus, ant, and oak DNA – to name just a few – is subsequently analyzed by eDNA metabarcoding: The method captures even the smallest traces of genetic information, amplifies them, and enables the precise identification of each species present in the sample.
Leese's team focused on invertebrates. And by comparing the DNA analyses with the animals actually discovered in the rain samplers, they found that of the 50 species detected, only seven had fallen into the samples as whole specimens. "So, we conclude that our method actually provides a good overview of the biodiversity in tree canopies," explains first author Till Macher.
The biologists also found that species composition varied from tree to tree: overall, they were able to assign 88 percent of the species detected to a specific tree type.
Although the researchers worked with a small sample size for now, the results are convincing, Leese points out: "Our results show the potential of eDNA metabarcoding in rainwater as a rapid and minimally invasive method to measure the diversity of invertebrates living in tree canopies."
Editor: Birte Vierjahn, Tel. 0151 / 688 150 16, vierjahn@uni-due.org
Prof. Dr. Florian Leese, Aquatic Ecosystem Research, +49 151 / 16 46 34 46, florian.leese.ude@proton.me
https://doi.org/10.1002/edn3.372
What does live in tree canopies?
Till Macher
UDE/Till Macher
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Biology, Environment / ecology
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