Vol. 60, 2021
(update: 2021.10.27; 12.22)
Metabarcoding of Fish Larvae in
Merbok River Reveals Species Diversity and Distribution Along its
Mangrove Environment
Norli Fauzani Mohd Abu Hassan
Alshari1 , Siti
Zuliana Ahmad1 , Azali
Azlan1 , Youn-Ho
Lee3, Ghows
Azzam1,* , and Siti Azizah Mohd Nor1,2
doi:10.6620/ZS.2021.60-76
1School
of Biological Sciences, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 11800, Penang,
Malaysia. *Correspondence: E-mail: ghows@usm.my (Azzam)
E-mail: nfauzani0693@gmail.com (Mohd Abu Hassan Alshari);
liazuliana11@gmail.com (Ahmad); azlanazali01@gmail.com (Azlan);
sazizah@usm.my (Nor)
2Institute of Marine
Biotechnology, Universiti Malaysia Terengganu, 21030 Kuala Terengganu,
Terengganu, Malaysia. E-mail: s.azizah@umt.edu.my (Nor)
3Korean Institute of Ocean Science and Technology,
Republic of Korea. E-mail: ylee@kiost.ac.kr (Lee)
Received 24 November 2020 / Accepted
11 October 2021
Communicated by Ryuji Machida
The
Merbok River (north-west of Peninsular Malaysia) is a mangrove estuary
that provides habitat for over 100 species of fish, which are
economically and ecologically important. Threats such as habitat loss
and overfishing becomin a great concern for fisheries
conservation and management. The identification of larval fish in this
estuarine system is important to complement information on the adults.
This is because the data could inform the spawning behaviour,
reproductive biology, selection of nursery grounds and migration
route of fish. Such information is invaluable for fisheries and aquatic
environmental monitoring, and thus for their conservation and
management. However, identifying fish larvae is a challenging task
based only on morphology and even traditional DNA barcoding. To address
this, DNA metabarcoding was utilised to detect the diversity of fish in
the Merbok River. To complete the study, the fish larvae were collected at
six sampling sites of the river. The extracted larval DNA was amplified
for the Cytochrome Oxidase subunit 1 (COI)
and 12S ribosomal RNA (12S rRNA) genes based on the metabarcoding
approach using shotgun sequencing on the next-generation sequencing (NGS)
Illumina MiSeq platform. Eighty-nine species from 65 genera and 41
families were detected, with Oryzias
javanicus, Oryzias dancena,
Lutjanus argentimaculatus
and Lutjanus malabaricus
among the most common species. The lower diversity observed from
previous morphological studies is suggested to be mainly due to
seasonal variation over the sampling period between the two methods and
limited 12S rRNA sequences in current databases. The metabarcode data
and a validation Sanger sequencing step using 15 species-specific
primer pairs detected three species in common: Oryzias javanicus, Decapterus maruadsi and Pennahia macrocephalus.
Several discrepancies observed between the two molecular approaches
could be attributed to contaminants during sampling and DNA extraction,
which could mask the presence of target species, especially when DNA
from the contaminants is more abundant than the target organisms. In
conclusion, this rapid and cost-effective identification method using
DNA metabarcoding allowed the detection of numerous fish species from
bulk larval samples in the Merbok River. This method can be applied to
other sites and other organisms of interest.
Key words: Fish larvae,
Mangrove estuary, Merbok River, DNA metabarcoding, Next-generation
sequencing
Citation:
Alshari NFMAH, Ahmad SZ, Azlan A, Lee YH, Azzam G, Nor SAM. 2021.
Metabarcoding of fish larvae in Merbok River reveals species diversity
and distribution along its mangrove environment. Zool Stud 60:76. doi:10.6620/ZS.2021.60-76.

Supplementary
materials: Table S1丨Table S2丨Table S3
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