Journal article

Environmental DNA sampling is more sensitive than a traditional survey technique for detecting an aquatic invader

AS Smart, R Tingley, AR Weeks, AR Van Rooyen, MA McCarthy

Ecological Applications | WILEY | Published : 2015

Abstract

Effective management of alien species requires detecting populations in the early stages of invasion. Environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling can detect aquatic species at relatively low densities, but few studies have directly compared detection probabilities of eDNA sampling with those of traditional sampling methods. We compare the ability of a traditional sampling technique (bottle trapping) and eDNA to detect a recently established invader, the smooth newt Lissotriton vulgaris vulgaris, at seven field sites in Melbourne, Australia. Over a four-month period, per-trap detection probabilities ranged from 0.01 to 0.26 among sites where L. v. vulgaris was detected, whereas per-sample eDNA estimate..

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University of Melbourne Researchers