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The predator problem and PCR primers in molecular dietary analysis: Swamped or silenced; depth or breadth?

Cuff, JP; Kitson, JNJ; Hemprich-Bennett, D; Tercel, MPTG; Browett, S; Evans, DM

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Authors

JP Cuff

JNJ Kitson

D Hemprich-Bennett

MPTG Tercel

S Browett

DM Evans



Abstract

Dietary metabarcoding has vastly improved our ability to analyse the diets of animals, but it is hampered by a plethora of technical limitations including potentially reduced data output due to the disproportionate amplification of the DNA of the focal predator, here termed “the predator problem”. We review the various methods commonly used to overcome this problem, from deeper sequencing to exclusion of predator DNA during PCR, and how they may interfere with increasingly common multipredator-taxon studies. We suggest that multiprimer approaches with an emphasis on achieving both depth and breadth of prey detections may overcome the issue to some extent, although multitaxon studies require further consideration, as highlighted by an empirical example. We also review several alternative methods for reducing the prevalence of predator DNA that are conceptually promising but require additional empirical examination. The predator problem is a key constraint on molecular dietary analyses but, through this synthesis, we hope to guide researchers in overcoming this in an effective and pragmatic way.

Citation

Cuff, J., Kitson, J., Hemprich-Bennett, D., Tercel, M., Browett, S., & Evans, D. (2022). The predator problem and PCR primers in molecular dietary analysis: Swamped or silenced; depth or breadth?. Molecular Ecology Resources,

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Aug 24, 2022
Publication Date Aug 26, 2022
Deposit Date Sep 22, 2022
Publicly Available Date Sep 22, 2022
Journal Molecular Ecology Resources
Print ISSN 1755-098X
Electronic ISSN 1755-0998
Publisher Wiley
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1111/1755-0998.13705

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