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      Prospects and challenges of implementing DNA metabarcoding for high-throughput insect surveillance

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          Abstract

          Trap-based surveillance strategies are widely used for monitoring of invasive insect species, aiming to detect newly arrived exotic taxa as well as track the population levels of established or endemic pests. Where these surveillance traps have low specificity and capture non-target endemic species in excess of the target pests, the need for extensive specimen sorting and identification creates a major diagnostic bottleneck. While the recent development of standardized molecular diagnostics has partly alleviated this requirement, the single specimen per reaction nature of these methods does not readily scale to the sheer number of insects trapped in surveillance programmes. Consequently, target lists are often restricted to a few high-priority pests, allowing unanticipated species to avoid detection and potentially establish populations.

          DNA metabarcoding has recently emerged as a method for conducting simultaneous, multi-species identification of complex mixed communities and may lend itself ideally to rapid diagnostics of bulk insect trap samples. Moreover, the high-throughput nature of recent sequencing platforms could enable the multiplexing of hundreds of diverse trap samples on a single flow cell, thereby providing the means to dramatically scale up insect surveillance in terms of both the quantity of traps that can be processed concurrently and number of pest species that can be targeted. In this review of the metabarcoding literature, we explore how DNA metabarcoding could be tailored to the detection of invasive insects in a surveillance context and highlight the unique technical and regulatory challenges that must be considered when implementing high-throughput sequencing technologies into sensitive diagnostic applications.

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          Most cited references217

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          Environmental DNA metabarcoding: Transforming how we survey animal and plant communities

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              obitools: a unix-inspired software package for DNA metabarcoding.

              DNA metabarcoding offers new perspectives in biodiversity research. This recently developed approach to ecosystem study relies heavily on the use of next-generation sequencing (NGS) and thus calls upon the ability to deal with huge sequence data sets. The obitools package satisfies this requirement thanks to a set of programs specifically designed for analysing NGS data in a DNA metabarcoding context. Their capacity to filter and edit sequences while taking into account taxonomic annotation helps to set up tailor-made analysis pipelines for a broad range of DNA metabarcoding applications, including biodiversity surveys or diet analyses. The obitools package is distributed as an open source software available on the following website: http://metabarcoding.org/obitools. A Galaxy wrapper is available on the GenOuest core facility toolshed: http://toolshed.genouest.org.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Gigascience
                Gigascience
                gigascience
                GigaScience
                Oxford University Press
                2047-217X
                August 2019
                30 July 2019
                30 July 2019
                : 8
                : 8
                : giz092
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Agriculture Victoria Research, AgriBio Centre, 5 Ring Road, Bundoora 3083, VIC, Australia
                [2 ]School of Applied Systems Biology, La Trobe University, Bundoora 3083, VIC, Australia
                Author notes
                Correspondence address. Alexander M. Piper. AgriBio Centre, 5 Ring Road, Bundoora 3083, VIC, Australia ; E-mail: alexander.piper@ 123456ecodev.vic.gov.au
                Author information
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0664-7564
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-0919-568X
                http://orcid.org/0000-0002-9348-2939
                http://orcid.org/0000-0001-7864-5712
                Article
                giz092
                10.1093/gigascience/giz092
                6667344
                31363753
                6230aac8-8bba-4521-8c83-df95ff784b5d
                © The Author(s) 2019. Published by Oxford University Press.

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 11 January 2019
                : 25 June 2019
                : 09 July 2019
                Page count
                Pages: 22
                Funding
                Funded by: Horticulture Innovation Australia 10.13039/501100000981
                Award ID: ST16010
                Funded by: Plant Biosecurity Cooperative Research Centre
                Award ID: 2153
                Funded by: Agriculture Victoria's Improved Market Access for Horticulture programme
                Award ID: CMI105584
                Categories
                Review

                biosecurity,alien species,biosurveillance,early detection,bioinformatics,reference database,quality assurance,controls,validation,non-destructive

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