环境DNA
古代DNA
大型动物群
生物多样性
植被(病理学)
更新世
消光(光学矿物学)
动物群
生态学
白令
环境变化
全新世
地理
冰期
北极的
野生动物
环境史
古生物学
考古
地质学
生物
气候变化
病理
社会学
人口学
医学
人口
作者
Mikkel Winther Pedersen,Søren Overballe‐Petersen,Luca Ermini,Clio Der Sarkissian,James Haile,Micaela Hellström,Johan Spens,Philip Francis Thomsen,Kristine Bohmann,Enrico Cappellini,Ida Bærholm Schnell,Nathan Wales,Christian Carøe,Paula F. Campos,Astrid M. Z. Schmidt,M. Thomas P. Gilbert,Anders J. Hansen,Ludovic Orlando,Eske Willerslev
标识
DOI:10.1098/rstb.2013.0383
摘要
DNA obtained from environmental samples such as sediments, ice or water (environmental DNA, eDNA), represents an important source of information on past and present biodiversity. It has revealed an ancient forest in Greenland, extended by several thousand years the survival dates for mainland woolly mammoth in Alaska, and pushed back the dates for spruce survival in Scandinavian ice-free refugia during the last glaciation. More recently, eDNA was used to uncover the past 50 000 years of vegetation history in the Arctic, revealing massive vegetation turnover at the Pleistocene/Holocene transition, with implications for the extinction of megafauna. Furthermore, eDNA can reflect the biodiversity of extant flora and fauna, both qualitatively and quantitatively, allowing detection of rare species. As such, trace studies of plant and vertebrate DNA in the environment have revolutionized our knowledge of biogeography. However, the approach remains marred by biases related to DNA behaviour in environmental settings, incomplete reference databases and false positive results due to contamination. We provide a review of the field.
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