Abstract
Tropical rainforest canopies shelter an under-explored reservoir of biodiversity. In recent years, the amplification and sequencing of taxonomically informative DNA fragments from environmental samples (i.e. eDNA) has revolutionized biomonitoring. Here, we explore the potential of DNA contained in canopy throughfall water to sample the biological diversity of rainforest canopies. By sampling rainwash eDNA in two 1ha-plots, one mature Amazonian forest and a nearby tree plantation, we were able to detect 170 plant taxa, 72 vertebrate taxa including mammals, birds, and amphibians, and 313 insect taxa including e.g. mosquitoes, ants, beetles. The taxonomic composition retrieved in these two plots reflected their different disturbance status, and the plantation exhibited a much lower diversity. We also found that rainwash eDNA persists over ten days in passive eDNA collectors while providing a local picture of the diversity. This suggests that this method can be scaled up for a cost-effective environmental management of rainforests, and more generally of all forests canopies.
Competing Interest Statement
The authors have declared no competing interest.
Footnotes
The format of the paper has been revised to include a mode detailed introduction.