DOE PAGES title logo U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

Title: eDNAjoint: An R package for interpreting paired or semi‐paired environmental DNA and traditional survey data in a Bayesian framework

Journal Article · · Methods in Ecology and Evolution (Online)
ORCiD logo [1]; ORCiD logo [2]
  1. Department of Environment Science, Policy, and Management University of California, Berkeley Berkeley California USA
  2. School of Marine and Environmental Affairs University of Washington Seattle Washington USA

Abstract Environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling is increasingly used in surveys of species distribution as a potentially sensitive and efficient monitoring method. Yet access to modelling tools designed specifically for interpreting this new data type lags behind its ubiquity. While occupancy modelling software has dominated the analytical landscape for eDNA data analysis of single species, this type of model may not always be the most appropriate. The rate of eDNA detection often corresponds to species density, rather than just occupancy, and researchers often have access to observations from non‐genetic sampling methods at the same sites. To provide users access to a modelling framework designed to maximize the use of all available data, we developed an R package, eDNAjoint . The package provides an easy‐to‐use interface for fitting a ‘joint’ model that integrates data from paired or semi‐paired eDNA and traditional surveys in a Bayesian framework. The model can be used to estimate parameters like the probability of a false positive eDNA detection and mean catch rate at a site, and the package allows access to multiple model variations and Bayesian prior customization. Additional functionality can be used for model selection, summarising posteriors and comparing the relative sensitivities of the two survey methods. We demonstrate the use of eDNAjoint by fitting a variation of the model with site‐level covariates that scale the sensitivity of eDNA sampling relative to traditional sampling. The example workflow uses binary eDNA and seine count data for the endangered tidewater goby ( Eucyclogobius newberryi ) from a study by Schmelzle and Kinziger (2016). This use case includes a prior sensitivity analysis and an evaluation of the relationship between detection rates and environmental variables. eDNAjoint has the potential to greatly increase the range of users who will be able to rigorously analyse eDNA and traditional survey data in a Bayesian framework, understand if and how eDNA can improve monitoring practices, and gain confidence in the interpretability of eDNA data.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
Grant/Contract Number:
SC0024386
OSTI ID:
2540180
Journal Information:
Methods in Ecology and Evolution (Online), Journal Name: Methods in Ecology and Evolution (Online) Journal Issue: 5 Vol. 16; ISSN 2041-210X
Publisher:
Wiley-BlackwellCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United Kingdom
Language:
English

References (21)

Tracking an invasion front with environmental DNA journal March 2022
The artemis package for environmental DNA analysis in R journal February 2022
Adoption of environmental DNA in public agency practice journal September 2023
From eDNA to citizen science: emerging tools for the early detection of invasive species journal February 2020
Environmental DNA surveys can underestimate amphibian occupancy and overestimate detection probability: implications for practice journal July 2023
Practical Bayesian model evaluation using leave-one-out cross-validation and WAIC journal August 2016
Concentrations of environmental DNA (eDNA) reflect spawning salmon abundance at fine spatial and temporal scales journal April 2018
Saving the doomed: Using eDNA to aid in detection of rare sturgeon for conservation (Acipenseridae) journal October 2016
Seasonal trends in eDNA detection and occupancy of bigheaded carps journal August 2017
Predicting trawl catches using environmental DNA journal August 2024
Species detection using environmental DNA from water samples journal April 2008
Environmental DNA provides quantitative estimates of Pacific hake abundance and distribution in the open ocean journal March 2022
Statistical approaches to account for false‐positive errors in environmental DNA samples journal December 2015
Can we manage fisheries with the inherent uncertainty from eDNA? journal December 2019
The relationship between eDNA particle concentration and organism abundance in nature is strengthened by allometric scaling journal August 2020
Moving beyond noninformative priors: why and how to choose weakly informative priors in Bayesian analyses journal March 2019
Rank-Normalization, Folding, and Localization: An Improved Rˆ for Assessing Convergence of MCMC (with Discussion) journal June 2021
unmarked : An R Package for Fitting Hierarchical Models of Wildlife Occurrence and Abundance journal January 2011
Stan : A Probabilistic Programming Language journal January 2017
Estimating site Occupancy Rates when Detection Probabilities are less than one journal August 2002
Estimating Abundance from Repeated Presence–Absence data or Point Counts journal March 2003