Data from: Estimating species colonization dates using DNA in lake sediment
1. Detection of DNA in lake sediments holds promise as a tool to study processes like extinction, colonization, adaptation and evolutionary divergence. However, low concentrations make sediment DNA difficult to detect, leading to high false negative rates. Additionally, contamination could potential...
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Zusammenfassung: | 1. Detection of DNA in lake sediments holds promise as a tool to study
processes like extinction, colonization, adaptation and evolutionary
divergence. However, low concentrations make sediment DNA difficult to
detect, leading to high false negative rates. Additionally, contamination
could potentially lead to high false positive rates. Careful laboratory
procedures can reduce false positive and negative rates, but should not be
assumed to completely eliminate them. Therefore, methods are needed that
identify potential false positive and negative results, and use this
information to judge the plausibility of different interpretations of DNA
data from natural archives. 2. We developed a Bayesian algorithm to infer
the colonization history of a species using records of DNA from
lake-sediment cores, explicitly labelling some observations as false
positive or false negative. We illustrate the method by analysing DNA of
whitefish (Coregonus lavaretus. L) from sediment cores covering the past
10,000 years from two central Swedish lakes. We provide the algorithm as
an R-script, and the data from this study as example input files. 3. In
one lake, Stora Lögdasjön, where connectivity with the proto-Baltic Sea
and the degree of whitefish ecotype differentiation suggested colonization
immediately after deglaciation, DNA was indeed successfully recovered and
amplified throughout the postglacial sediment. For this lake we found no
loss of detection probability over time, but a high false negative rate.
In the other lake, Hotagen, where connectivity and ecotype differentiation
suggested colonization long after deglaciation, DNA was amplified only in
the upper part of the sediment, and colonization was estimated at 2,200 BP
based on the assumption that successful amplicons represent whitefish
presence. Here the earliest amplification represents a false positive with
a posterior probability of 41%, which increases the uncertainty in the
estimated time of colonization. 4. Complementing careful laboratory
procedures aimed at preventing contamination, our method estimates
contamination rates from the data. By combining these results with
estimates of false negative rates, our models facilitate unbiased
interpretation of data from natural DNA archives. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.hq1hr |