How we can detect pretty much anything - Hélène Morlon and Anna Papadopoulou

320,134 views ・ 2021-08-24

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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For years, scientists have been staking out this remote forest in Montana
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for an animal that’s notoriously tricky to find.
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Camera traps haven’t offered definitive evidence,
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and even experts can't identify its tracks with certainty.
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But within the past decades,
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researchers have developed methods that can detect even the most elusive species.
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And so, in 2018, these scientists took a sample from some conspicuous snow tracks.
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Lab tests showed conclusive results:
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the Canada lynx was indeed present in the area.
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Without seeing the cat, scientists had proof it was there
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because of environmental DNA or eDNA.
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Using a technique called DNA metabarcoding,
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researchers can take a sample from the environment
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and learn which organisms are in it or have recently passed through it.
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The world is covered in DNA.
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It’s all around us—
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on the ground, at the bottom of the ocean, and up in the clouds.
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Multicellular organisms are constantly shedding cells.
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But until recently, eDNA wasn’t very useful to us.
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Traditional scientific techniques couldn’t parse environmental samples
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containing mixed genetic material from multiple species.
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But DNA metabarcoding can.
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DNA begins to degrade once it’s exposed to the environment.
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In the ocean, for example, it may only persist for a few days.
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So in many contexts, eDNA is useful for telling us about the recent past.
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The process of DNA metabarcoding starts with an environmental sample
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like a core of soil, a vial of water, some feces, an insect trap,
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or even the blood from leeches’ stomachs.
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Researchers then sift out everything aside from DNA by blending the sample up
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and using enzymes that break down cellular proteins and release DNA,
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which they purify.
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The result is a “soup” of all the DNA in the sample.
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Scientists then apply the polymerase chain reaction or PCR,
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which uses artificial DNA strands called universal primers.
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These primers bind to DNA sequences that are similar across species,
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then amplify genetic barcodes that are species-specific.
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High-throughput sequencing then reads millions of these DNA fragments,
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simultaneously.
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And finally, researchers compare them to reference databases
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and identify how many and which species are present—
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or if they’ve found entirely new ones.
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This method has led to the discovery of tens of thousands of species
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over the past decade.
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While metabarcoding can detect elusive animals like the Canada lynx,
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it can also help scientists identify invasive species.
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In Yosemite, researchers used eDNA to track and remove invasive bullfrogs.
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Once no trace of these amphibians remained,
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they reintroduced a threatened native species, California red-legged frogs,
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which had disappeared from the area some 50 years prior.
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Likewise, DNA metabarcoding can be used to monitor biodiversity.
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For example, using traditional approaches,
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categorizing all of the insects in a hectare of rainforest can take decades.
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But DNA from insect traps could yield these results in just a few months.
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One study compared insects from adjacent forest and plantation sites
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within China’s Yunnan province.
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It quickly found that not only were plantations less diverse,
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but deforestation affected insect groups unequally.
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Grasshoppers thrived in cleared areas while specialist forest beetles declined.
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Using eDNA, scientists are able to investigate
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complex ecosystem interactions.
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Tracking thousands of insects as they visit flowers is impossible.
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Instead, researchers can study the DNA left on flowers and insects
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to map pollination networks.
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Before these techniques were available, we didn’t really know how much pollination
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was happening at night because we couldn’t observe it.
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Now scientists understand that moths are important nocturnal pollinators.
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eDNA can even tell stories of long extinct species.
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Cold, dry, and low oxygen conditions are perfect for preserving genetic material.
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By digging deep into the Arctic permafrost,
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researchers found 50,000 year old DNA,
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which they matched to the nutrient-rich plants
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found in the stomachs of woolly mammoths.
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With eDNA, they also found that less nutritious grasses
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colonized the Arctic steppe during the last ice age,
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potentially contributing to the mammoth decline.
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As we face another period of climate change—
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this time due to human activities—
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understanding our planet’s rapidly shifting biodiversity
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will be crucial to protecting it.
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Fortunately, eDNA and metabarcoding
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give us the tools to document rapid change in real time.
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