DOI: 10.3390/environments13070374 ISSN: 2076-3298

Complementary eDNA Markers Reveal Fish Biodiversity Patterns Across Environmental Gradients in a High-Andean River System

Manhiro Flores-Iwasaki, Roberto Carlos Mori-Zabarburú, Armstrong B. Fernández-Jeri, Lucas D. Muñoz-Astecker, Sivmny V. Valqui-Reina, Eisen Carlos Usquiza Cruz, Jorge A. Condori-Apfata, Angel David Hernández-Amasifuen

This study represents the first comprehensive characterization of fish biodiversity in the Sonche Canyon (northeastern Peru) using environmental DNA (eDNA), revealing a community of 19 taxa whose detection depended critically on a multi-marker approach. The analysis demonstrated that the use of both Metafish and Mifish-U PCR primer pairs generated a high complementarity index (0.53), allowing the capture of divergent biological signals; Metafish was essential for identifying characiformes; while Mifish-U revealed the presence of specific gymnotiformes and loricariids. The findings, supported by rarification curves confirming sampling saturation. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) revealed co-variation between the biodiversity “hotspot” in Tingorbamba and elevated nitrate concentration (6.1 mg/L), as well as the ubiquitous presence of the invasive species Oncorhynchus mykiss. In conclusion, the utility of the molecular markers and the observed co-variation between physicochemical variables and species distributions underscore the need for standardized protocols for the monitoring and conservation of fauna in the vulnerable lotic systems of the Peruvian Andes.

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