At each site its diversity: {DNA} barcoding reveals remarkable earthworm diversity in neotropical rainforests of {French} {Guiana}

Despite their recognized essential role in soil, earthworms in tropical environments are still understudied. The aim of this study was to re-evaluate the diversity at the regional scale, as well as to investigate the environmental and spatial drivers of earthworm communities. We sampled earthworm communities across a range of habitats at six locations in French Guiana using three different sampling methods. We generated 1675 DNA barcodes and combined them with data from a previous study. Together, all sequences clustered into 119 MOTUs which were used as proxy to assess species richness. Only two MOTUs were common between the six locations and 20.2 % were singletons, showing very high regional species richness and a high number of rare species. A canonical redundancy analysis was used to identify key drivers of the earthworm community composition. The RDA results and beta-diversity calculations both show strong species turnover and a strong spatial effect, resulting from dispersal limitations that are responsible for the current community composition. Sampling in different microhabitats allowed the discovery of 23 MOTUs that are exclusively found in decaying trunks and epiphytes, highlighting hidden diversity of earthworms outside of soil.Competing Interest StatementThe authors have declared no competing interest.

Références

Title
At each site its diversity: {DNA} barcoding reveals remarkable earthworm diversity in neotropical rainforests of {French} {Guiana}
Publication Type
Journal Article
Year of Publication
2020
Journal
bioRxiv
Pagination
2020.09.21.307348
Date Published
jan
Submitted on 26 October 2021