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Environmental DNA metabarcoding facilitates integrative conservation assessments and species rediscoveries in tropical biodiversity hotspots

  • Amadeus Plewnia*
  • , Tobias Hildwein
  • , Amanda B. Quezada Riera
  • , Andrea Terán-Valdez
  • , Andrew J. Crawford
  • , Christopher Heine
  • , Daniela Franco-Mena
  • , Diana Székely
  • , Diego Armijos-Ojeda
  • , Fausto R. Siavichay
  • , Jackeline D. Arpi
  • , Jazmin Salazar
  • , Jesse Erens
  • , Mónica I. Páez-Vacas
  • , Paul Székely
  • , Philipp Böning
  • , Raf Stassen
  • , Sofía Carvajal-Endara
  • , Stefan Lötters
  • , Juan M. Guayasamin
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Trier University
  • Fundación Jambatu
  • Universidad de los Andes Colombia
  • Universidad Técnica Particular de Loja
  • Centro de Conservación de Anfibios AMARU
  • Universidad Católica de Cuenca
  • Habitats Conservation
  • Universidad San Francisco de Quito

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Environmental DNA (eDNA) metabarcoding is an emerging and versatile tool in biodiversity research. With recent advances in field sampling techniques, this approach becomes increasingly suited for application in tropical ecosystems where biodiversity monitoring gaps remain significant and species detection is particularly challenging. Using amphibians as a model, we harness eDNA metabarcoding in 52 localities in the Tropical Andean biodiversity hotspot to rapidly trace elusive, threatened, or presumed extinct species as a baseline for conservation action. Metabarcoding ‘bycatch’ of non-target species further revealed specific environmental threats through the detection of invasive species and pathogens, thus facilitating integrative conservation assessments despite the incompleteness of reference data and the vast species richness hampering biodiversity assessments in complex tropical communities. Consequently, we call for more intense employment of eDNA metabarcoding in conservation to rapidly bridge critical knowledge gaps on elusive species or declining populations in tropical biodiversity hotspots.

Original languageEnglish
Article number8150
JournalScientific Reports
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2026

Keywords

  • Amphibian crisis
  • Extinction
  • Invasive species
  • Metagenomics
  • Monitoring
  • Pathogens
  • Tropical Andes
  • eDNA

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