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High meiofaunal diversity in the Azores revealed through DNA metabarcoding

Vitenskapelig artikkel
Publiseringsår
2025
Tidsskrift
Marine Biodiversity
Eksterne nettsted
Cristin
Doi
Arkiv
Forfattere
Francesca Leasi, Nuno V. Álvaro, Luiz F. Andrade, Thiago Q. Araújo, Víctor Aramayo, Tom Artois, Will M. Ballentine, Franziska S. Bergmeier, Andrea Z. Botelho, Ariane Buckenmeyer, Ana Teresa Capucho, Irina Cherneva, Ana Cristina Ricardo Costa, Marco Curini-Galletti, Anitha Mary Davidson, Wang Deng, Maikon Di Domenico, Christina Ellison, Jan Engelhardt, Maria Fais, Duarte G. Frade, António M. de Frias Martins, Freya E. Goetz, Rick Hochberg, Alberto de Jesus-Navarrete, Ulf Jondelius, Ylva Jondelius, Katharina M. Jörger, Nina Luckas, Alejandro Martínez, Anna Mikhlina, Timea P. Neusser, Jon L. Norenburg, Juan Pardo, Antônio J. M. Peixoto, Nickellaus Roberts, Alexandra Savchenko, Andreas Schmidt-Rhaesa, Lenke Tödter, Meghan Yap-Chiongco, Diego Fontaneto

Sammendrag

To advance understanding of meiofauna, key components of marine benthic ecosystems, an international team conducted a morphology-based taxonomic survey and workshop around São Miguel, the largest Azorean island, in 2019. The survey yielded critical baseline data on meiofaunal diversity and, despite taxonomic challenges that limited identification of certain taxa, laid a solid foundation for further research. To expand these findings, additional samples were analyzed using DNA metabarcoding, a powerful tool that assesses multiple facets of biodiversity, including richness, community composition, and phylogenetic diversity. Metabarcoding identified 480 meiofaunal amplicon sequence variants across 14 phyla, more than doubling the 180 taxa recorded through morphology alone. Of these, 298 (approximately 62%) belonged to phyla targeted during the morphology-based workshop. A comparison between the two approaches, focusing on clades addressed during the workshop, revealed overlapping but expanded patterns of diversity relative to morphology-based taxonomy. This consistency supports the metabarcoding’s ability to uncover meiofaunal diversity and underscores the importance of integrating both methods to achieve a more comprehensive understanding of biodiversity and ecological patterns. As the first metabarcoding study in the Azores, this work establishes a biodiversity baseline for a remote and understudied region, indicating greater benthic diversity than previously recognized. By revealing the complexity of these understudied ecosystems, this research contributes to document and support conservation of biodiversity in the Azores and emphasizes the need for further exploration of meiofaunal communities in isolated oceanic environments.