Elucidating Biodiversity Shifts in Ballast Water Tanks
during a Cross-Latitudinal Transfer: Complementary Insights from Molecular
Analyses
Posted on 2020-06-09 - 21:03
In this study, the evolution of ballast water (BW) assemblages
across different trophic levels was characterized over a 21 day cross-latitudinal
vessel transit using a combination of molecular methods. Triplicate
BW samples were collected every second day and size-fractionated (<2.7,
10, >50 μm). Measurements of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and
metabarcoding of environmental nucleic acid (DNA and RNA) analyses,
complemented by microscopy and flow cytometry, were performed on each
sample. Measured ATP concentrations exhibited high variance between
replicates and a strong negative trend in the large (≥50 μm)
fraction over the voyage. In concert with microscopy, the metabarcoding
data indicated a die-off of larger metazoans during the first week
of study and gradual reductions in dinoflagellates and ochrophytes.
The ATP and metabarcoding data signaled persistent or increased cellular
activity of heterotrophic bacteria and protists in the BW, which was
supported by flow cytometry. The metabarcoding showed the presence
of active bacteria in all size fractions, suggesting that the sequential
filtration approach does not ensure taxonomical differentiation, which
has implications for BW quality assessment. Although our data show
that ATP and metabarcoding have potential for indicative BW screening
for BW compliance monitoring, further research and technological development
is needed to improve representativeness of sampling and deliver the
unequivocal response criteria required by the international Ballast
Water Management Convention.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
Zaiko, Anastasija; Wood, Susanna A.; Pochon, Xavier; Biessy, Laura; Laroche, Olivier; Croot, Peter; et al. (2020). Elucidating Biodiversity Shifts in Ballast Water Tanks
during a Cross-Latitudinal Transfer: Complementary Insights from Molecular
Analyses. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.0c01931