The sampling of environmental DNA (eDNA) coupled with cost-efficient and ever-advancing sequencing technology is propelling changes in biodiversity monitoring within aquatic ecosystems. Despite the increasing number of eDNA metabarcoding approaches, the ability to quantify species biomass and abundance in natural systems is still not fully understood. Previous studies have shown positive but sometimes weak correlations between abundance estimates from eDNA metabarcoding data and from conventional capture methods. As both methods have independent biases a lack of concordance is difficult to interpret. Here we tested whether read counts from eDNA metabarcoding provide accurate quantitative estimates of the absolute abundance of fish in holdin...
Assessments of fish communities tend to rely on capture-based methods that, due to sampling biases, ...
Understanding biodiversity in aquatic systems is critical to ecological research and conservation ef...
Organisms continuously release DNA into their environments via shed cells, excreta, gametes and deca...
The sampling of environmental DNA (eDNA) coupled with cost-efficient and ever-advancing sequencing t...
Abstract The simultaneous conservation of species richness and evenness is important to effectively ...
The ability to properly identify species present in a landscape is foundational to ecology and essen...
We have recently developed and deployed methods for environmental DNA (eDNA) based monitoring of lak...
Effective ecosystem conservation and resource management require quantitative monitoring of biodiver...
The applications of environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding are constantly increasing. Many validatio...
Estimating abundance or biomass using eDNA metabarcoding is a powerful emerging tool that may provid...
Freshwater fauna are particularly sensitive to environmental change and disturbance. Management agen...
The foundation for any ecological study and for the effective management of biodiversity in natural ...
The use of environmental DNA (eDNA) methods for community analysis has recently been developed. High...
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding has emerged as a potentially powerful tool to assess aquatic ...
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is a method to detect taxa from environmental samples. It is ...
Assessments of fish communities tend to rely on capture-based methods that, due to sampling biases, ...
Understanding biodiversity in aquatic systems is critical to ecological research and conservation ef...
Organisms continuously release DNA into their environments via shed cells, excreta, gametes and deca...
The sampling of environmental DNA (eDNA) coupled with cost-efficient and ever-advancing sequencing t...
Abstract The simultaneous conservation of species richness and evenness is important to effectively ...
The ability to properly identify species present in a landscape is foundational to ecology and essen...
We have recently developed and deployed methods for environmental DNA (eDNA) based monitoring of lak...
Effective ecosystem conservation and resource management require quantitative monitoring of biodiver...
The applications of environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding are constantly increasing. Many validatio...
Estimating abundance or biomass using eDNA metabarcoding is a powerful emerging tool that may provid...
Freshwater fauna are particularly sensitive to environmental change and disturbance. Management agen...
The foundation for any ecological study and for the effective management of biodiversity in natural ...
The use of environmental DNA (eDNA) methods for community analysis has recently been developed. High...
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding has emerged as a potentially powerful tool to assess aquatic ...
Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is a method to detect taxa from environmental samples. It is ...
Assessments of fish communities tend to rely on capture-based methods that, due to sampling biases, ...
Understanding biodiversity in aquatic systems is critical to ecological research and conservation ef...
Organisms continuously release DNA into their environments via shed cells, excreta, gametes and deca...