Project

Biomonitoring for Ecosystem Health

Full Title: Biomonitoring for ecosystem health: Developing an ‘Omics toolkit to assess changes in estuarine plankton communities
Estuaries, vital coastal ecosystems, face numerous human-induced pressures, posing challenges for effective monitoring and mitigation. Utilizing DNA metabarcoding, this proposal aims to create a comprehensive toolkit for analyzing plankton communities in estuarine waters. The study will provide valuable baseline data for conservation efforts and offer transferable tools for coastal ecosystem assessment across the United States.
Lead Investigator: Ashley Reaume ashleyreaume@knights.ucf.edu Dr. Michelle Gaither Associate Professor Biological Sciences Michelle.Gaither@ucf.edu
Project Team: Gaither Lab
Collaborator: FWC, Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve
Award Amount: $24,994
Year Funded: 2023
Award Period: 2/1/23 – 1/31/24
Project Abstract:

Estuaries are dynamic coastal ecosystems that are uniquely intertwined with human life and subject to a diversity of anthropogenic pressures. Due to their complexity, monitoring the health of estuaries and pinpointing stressors for mitigation can be challenging. Plankton communities are key components of estuarine ecosystem functioning and are often used for bioindication because they respond rapidly to environmental change. Data on plankton community composition is traditionally obtained through visual identification by trained experts but processing samples is timeconsuming and limited in taxonomic resolution. A solution is DNA metabarcoding, a molecular technique that utilizes universal primers and high-throughput sequencing to identify multiple species within a single sample that contains DNA from mixed sources. Here, I propose to optimize DNA metabarcoding approaches to 1) design a novel “toolkit” for the analysis of plankton communities in estuarine water samples and 2) use these tools to investigate the relationship between environmental parameters, anthropogenic influences, and plankton community composition in the Guana Tolomato Matanzas National Estuarine Research Reserve in northeast Florida. The major outcome of this research will be a set of optimized tools for use in coastal systems across the U.S. and the important baseline data needed for conservation efforts in the GTM NERR.

A no cost extension was granted on this project through 1/31/25. The Sea Grant Fellow, Ashley Reaume, has made significant progress on the project; however, additional time is needed to finalize lab work, complete data analysis, and produce final reports. Objective 1 was delayed due to necessary training for data analysis and equipment failures with the university’s Illumina MiSeq sequencer, but it was successfully completed in August 2023. Lab work for Objective 2 commenced in September 2023, and sequencing is projected to conclude in Spring 2024. Data analysis and final reporting are anticipated to be finished by January 2025.

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