Assessment of marine benthic diatom communities: insights from a combined morphological–metabarcoding approach in Mediterranean shallow coastal waters

Abstract

We investigated the advantages and disadvantages of light microscope (LM)-based identifications and DNA metabarcoding, based on a 312-bp rbcL marker, for examining benthic diatom communities from Mediterranean shallow coastal environments. For this, we used biofilm samples collected from different substrata in the Ebro delta bays. We show that 1) Ebro delta bays harbour high-diversity diatom communities [LM identified 249 taxa] and 2) DNA metabarcoding effectively reflects this diversity at genus- but not species level, because of the incompleteness of the DNA reference library. Nevertheless, DNA metabarcoding offers new opportunities for detecting small, delicate and rare diatom species missed by LM and diatoms that lack silica frustules. The primers used, though designed for diatoms, successfully amplified rarely reported members of other stramenopile groups. Combining LM and DNA approaches offers stronger support for ecological studies of benthic microalgal communities in shallow coastal environments than using either approach on its own.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Accepted version

Language

English

Pages

54

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in

Marine Pollution Bulletin

Grant Agreement Number

EC/COST/CA15219/EU/Developing new genetic tools for bioassessment of aquatic ecosystems in Europe/DNAqua-Net

Recommended citation

Pérez-Burillo, Javier, Greta Valoti, Andrzej Witkowski, Patricia Prado, David G. Mann, and Rosa Trobajo. 2022. "Assessment Of Marine Benthic Diatom Communities: Insights From A Combined Morphological–Metabarcoding Approach In Mediterranean Shallow Coastal Waters". Marine Pollution Bulletin 174: 113183. doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2021.113183.

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International

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