Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes

This study is the first faunistic inventory of a zooplankton community from an open, karstic and oligotrophic aquatic sinkhole in the south of the Yucatan Peninsula (Mexico), we describe the richness of the zooplankton collected with the combination of plankton nets and light traps of our own desig...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lucia Montes-Ortiz, Manuel Elias-Gutierrez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2018-06-01
Series:Journal of Limnology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.jlimnol.it/index.php/jlimnol/article/view/1746
id doaj-97040fa62d83486bab7019fb08313ec6
record_format Article
spelling doaj-97040fa62d83486bab7019fb08313ec62020-11-25T03:58:19ZengPAGEPress PublicationsJournal of Limnology1129-57671723-86332018-06-0177310.4081/jlimnol.2018.1746Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodesLucia Montes-Ortiz0Manuel Elias-Gutierrez1El Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Unidad ChetumalEl Colegio de la Frontera Sur, Unidad Chetumal This study is the first faunistic inventory of a zooplankton community from an open, karstic and oligotrophic aquatic sinkhole in the south of the Yucatan Peninsula (Mexico), we describe the richness of the zooplankton collected with the combination of plankton nets and light traps of our own design, using morphological and molecular characters to identify the species and demonstrate the effectiveness of only one set of primers to sequence all taxa. Recently, it has been demonstrated that different sampling methods can increase the number of zooplankton species from tropical and temperate systems dramatically. These more effective methods together with DNA barcoding can give a new and more realistic picture of the species dwelling in a freshwater system. In total, we sequenced 268 specimens, and the list of species known in this sinkhole increased from 13 to 77 taxa, with a projection of 87 in total, including cladocerans, copepods, ostracods, fish larvae, tadpoles, rotifers, chironomids, water mites, among others. From the 77 taxa identified by us, 72 BINS (Barcode Index Numbers, equivalent to putative species) were assigned by the BOLD Database (boldsystems.org), and 30 of them are new records for both, BOLD and GenBank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). There was an essential difference in the number of taxa collected with the plankton nets and the light traps. Only 23 taxa were registered in the nets, representing between 28 and 29% of the total richness, while 67 were present in the light traps representing 87% of the species found. From these, 46 taxa were exclusive to this sampling method. Light traps are an effective method for rapid evaluation of zooplankton. In the future, combining DNA barcoding and high-throughput sequencing methods with more  efficient collecting will enable us to perform quick and precise biomonitoring of any aquatic ecosystem, enabling the detection of changes in zooplankton composition resulting from climate change and anthropogenic disturbances. Nevertheless, as a first step it is fundamental to establish a baseline of DNA barcodes for the species in these ecosystems. https://www.jlimnol.it/index.php/jlimnol/article/view/1746Barcodingbiomonitoringinventorylight-trapbioindicators.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucia Montes-Ortiz
Manuel Elias-Gutierrez
spellingShingle Lucia Montes-Ortiz
Manuel Elias-Gutierrez
Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes
Journal of Limnology
Barcoding
biomonitoring
inventory
light-trap
bioindicators.
author_facet Lucia Montes-Ortiz
Manuel Elias-Gutierrez
author_sort Lucia Montes-Ortiz
title Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes
title_short Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes
title_full Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes
title_fullStr Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes
title_full_unstemmed Faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, Cenote Azul (Quintana Roo, Mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with DNA barcodes
title_sort faunistic survey of the zooplankton community in an oligotrophic sinkhole, cenote azul (quintana roo, mexico), using different sampling methods, and documented with dna barcodes
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Journal of Limnology
issn 1129-5767
1723-8633
publishDate 2018-06-01
description This study is the first faunistic inventory of a zooplankton community from an open, karstic and oligotrophic aquatic sinkhole in the south of the Yucatan Peninsula (Mexico), we describe the richness of the zooplankton collected with the combination of plankton nets and light traps of our own design, using morphological and molecular characters to identify the species and demonstrate the effectiveness of only one set of primers to sequence all taxa. Recently, it has been demonstrated that different sampling methods can increase the number of zooplankton species from tropical and temperate systems dramatically. These more effective methods together with DNA barcoding can give a new and more realistic picture of the species dwelling in a freshwater system. In total, we sequenced 268 specimens, and the list of species known in this sinkhole increased from 13 to 77 taxa, with a projection of 87 in total, including cladocerans, copepods, ostracods, fish larvae, tadpoles, rotifers, chironomids, water mites, among others. From the 77 taxa identified by us, 72 BINS (Barcode Index Numbers, equivalent to putative species) were assigned by the BOLD Database (boldsystems.org), and 30 of them are new records for both, BOLD and GenBank (www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov). There was an essential difference in the number of taxa collected with the plankton nets and the light traps. Only 23 taxa were registered in the nets, representing between 28 and 29% of the total richness, while 67 were present in the light traps representing 87% of the species found. From these, 46 taxa were exclusive to this sampling method. Light traps are an effective method for rapid evaluation of zooplankton. In the future, combining DNA barcoding and high-throughput sequencing methods with more  efficient collecting will enable us to perform quick and precise biomonitoring of any aquatic ecosystem, enabling the detection of changes in zooplankton composition resulting from climate change and anthropogenic disturbances. Nevertheless, as a first step it is fundamental to establish a baseline of DNA barcodes for the species in these ecosystems.
topic Barcoding
biomonitoring
inventory
light-trap
bioindicators.
url https://www.jlimnol.it/index.php/jlimnol/article/view/1746
work_keys_str_mv AT luciamontesortiz faunisticsurveyofthezooplanktoncommunityinanoligotrophicsinkholecenoteazulquintanaroomexicousingdifferentsamplingmethodsanddocumentedwithdnabarcodes
AT manueleliasgutierrez faunisticsurveyofthezooplanktoncommunityinanoligotrophicsinkholecenoteazulquintanaroomexicousingdifferentsamplingmethodsanddocumentedwithdnabarcodes
_version_ 1724458045039181824