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      Metabarcoding quantifies differences in accumulation of ballast water borne biodiversity among three port systems in the United States

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          Abstract

          Characterizing biodiversity conveyed in ships’ ballast water (BW), a global driver of biological invasions, is critically important for understanding risks posed by this key vector and establishing baselines to evaluate changes associated with BW management. Here we employ high throughput sequence (HTS) metabarcoding of the 18S small subunit rRNA to test for and quantify differences in the accumulation of BW-borne biodiversity among three distinct recipient port systems in the United States. These systems were located on three different coasts (Pacific, Gulf, and Atlantic) and chosen to reflect distinct tradepatterns and source port biogeography. Extensive sampling of BW tanks (n = 116) allowed detailed exploration of molecular diversity accumulation. Our results indicate that saturation of introduced zooplankton diversity may be achieved quickly, with fewer than 25 tanks needed to achieve 95% of the total extrapolated diversity, if sou rce biogeography is relatively limited. However, as predicted, port systems with much broader source geographies require more extensive sampling to estimate diversity, which continues to accumulate after sampling >100 discharges. The ability to identify BW sources using molecular indicators was also found to depend on the breadth of source biogeography and the extent to which sources had been sampled. These findings have implications both for the effort required to fully understand introduced diversity and for projecting risks associated with future changes to maritime traffic that may increase source biogeography for many recipient ports. Our data also suggest that molecular diversity may not decline significantly with BW age, indicating either that some organisms survive longer than recognized in previous studies or that nucleic acids from dead organisms persist in BW tanks. We present evidence for detection of potentially invasive species in arriving BW but discuss important caveats that preclude strong inferences regarding the presence of living representatives of these species in BW tanks.

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                0330500
                7472
                Sci Total Environ
                Sci Total Environ
                The Science of the total environment
                0048-9697
                1879-1026
                4 June 2021
                03 August 2020
                20 December 2020
                20 December 2021
                : 749
                : 141456
                Affiliations
                [a ]United States Environmental Protection Agency, Center for Environmental Measurement & Modeling, USA
                [b ]Smithsonian Environmental Research Center, Edgewater, MD 21037, USA
                [c ]United States Environmental Protection Agency, Center for Computational Toxicology & Exposure, USA
                Author notes

                CRediT authorship contribution statement

                John A. Darling: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Project administration, Writing - original draft. John Martinson: Formal analysis, Writing - original draft. Katrina M. Pagenkopp Lohan: Conceptualization, Writing - original draft. Katharine J. Carney: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Writing - original draft. Erik Pilgrim: Data curation, Writing - original draft. Aabir Banerji: Formal analysis, Writing - review & editing. Kimberly K. Holzer: Project administration, Writing - review & editing, Investigation. Gregory M. Ruiz: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Writing - review & editing, Funding acquisition.

                [* ]Corresponding author at: US Environmental Protection Agency, Centerfor Environmental Measurement & Modeling, 109 T.W. Alexander Drive, Research Triangle Park, NC 27711,USA., Darling.John@ 123456epa.gov , (J.A. Darling).
                Article
                EPAPA1623217
                10.1016/j.scitotenv.2020.141456
                8190815
                32846346
                9cfce6f2-9626-44ac-bcb5-e8c512ac4225

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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                Categories
                Article

                General environmental science
                ballast water,biosecurity,metabarcoding,high throughput sequencing,biodiversity,zooplankton

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