TY - JOUR
T1 - Upscaling biodiversity monitoring
T2 - Metabarcoding estimates 31,846 insect species from Malaise traps across Germany
AU - Buchner, Dominik
AU - Sinclair, James S.
AU - Ayasse, Manfred
AU - Beermann, Arne J.
AU - Buse, Jörn
AU - Dziock, Frank
AU - Enss, Julian
AU - Frenzel, Mark
AU - Hörren, Thomas
AU - Li, Yuanheng
AU - Monaghan, Michael T.
AU - Morkel, Carsten
AU - Müller, Jörg
AU - Pauls, Steffen U.
AU - Richter, Ronny
AU - Scharnweber, Tobias
AU - Sorg, Martin
AU - Stoll, Stefan
AU - Twietmeyer, Sönke
AU - Weisser, Wolfgang W.
AU - Wiggering, Benedikt
AU - Wilmking, Martin
AU - Zotz, Gerhard
AU - Gessner, Mark O.
AU - Haase, Peter
AU - Leese, Florian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Molecular Ecology Resources published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Mitigating ongoing losses of insects and their key functions (e.g. pollination) requires tracking large-scale and long-term community changes. However, doing so has been hindered by the high diversity of insect species that requires prohibitively high investments of time, funding and taxonomic expertise when addressed with conventional tools. Here, we show that these concerns can be addressed through a comprehensive, scalable and cost-efficient DNA metabarcoding workflow. We use 1815 samples from 75 Malaise traps across Germany from 2019 and 2020 to demonstrate how metabarcoding can be incorporated into large-scale insect monitoring networks for less than 50 € per sample, including supplies, labour and maintenance. We validated the detected species using two publicly available databases (GBOL and GBIF) and the judgement of taxonomic experts. With an average of 1.4 M sequence reads per sample we uncovered 10,803 validated insect species, of which 83.9% were represented by a single Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU). We estimated another 21,043 plausible species, which we argue either lack a reference barcode or are undescribed. The total of 31,846 species is similar to the number of insect species known for Germany (~35,500). Because Malaise traps capture only a subset of insects, our approach identified many species likely unknown from Germany or new to science. Our reproducible workflow (~80% OTU-similarity among years) provides a blueprint for large-scale biodiversity monitoring of insects and other biodiversity components in near real time.
AB - Mitigating ongoing losses of insects and their key functions (e.g. pollination) requires tracking large-scale and long-term community changes. However, doing so has been hindered by the high diversity of insect species that requires prohibitively high investments of time, funding and taxonomic expertise when addressed with conventional tools. Here, we show that these concerns can be addressed through a comprehensive, scalable and cost-efficient DNA metabarcoding workflow. We use 1815 samples from 75 Malaise traps across Germany from 2019 and 2020 to demonstrate how metabarcoding can be incorporated into large-scale insect monitoring networks for less than 50 € per sample, including supplies, labour and maintenance. We validated the detected species using two publicly available databases (GBOL and GBIF) and the judgement of taxonomic experts. With an average of 1.4 M sequence reads per sample we uncovered 10,803 validated insect species, of which 83.9% were represented by a single Operational Taxonomic Unit (OTU). We estimated another 21,043 plausible species, which we argue either lack a reference barcode or are undescribed. The total of 31,846 species is similar to the number of insect species known for Germany (~35,500). Because Malaise traps capture only a subset of insects, our approach identified many species likely unknown from Germany or new to science. Our reproducible workflow (~80% OTU-similarity among years) provides a blueprint for large-scale biodiversity monitoring of insects and other biodiversity components in near real time.
KW - DNA metabarcoding
KW - Malaise trap
KW - biodiversity monitoring
KW - insect diversity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85205547870&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1111/1755-0998.14023
DO - 10.1111/1755-0998.14023
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205547870
SN - 1755-098X
VL - 25
JO - Molecular Ecology Resources
JF - Molecular Ecology Resources
IS - 1
M1 - e14023
ER -