Dear MARMAM,

I and my co-editors are pleased to share a Call for Proposals for
manuscript submissions to a special issue in Methods in Ecology and
Evolution under the topic: Advancing aquatic eDNA applications for rare
species.

Details can be found below and on the MEE website:
https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/toc/10.1111/(ISSN)2041-210X.aquatic-eDNA

Please feel free to reach out to any of the editors if you have any
questions.

Warm regards,
Amy Van Cise ([email protected])
Kim Parsons ([email protected])
Julia Clem ([email protected])
Kristina Cammen ([email protected])
Maggie Hunter ([email protected])

*Call for Proposals: Advancing aquatic eDNA applications for rare species *

As an emerging field, the application of environmental DNA (eDNA)
approaches to detect and monitor aquatic species has been a valuable tool.
However, the use of eDNA to detect and monitor rare species faces a suite
of challenges — some of which are unique to eDNA applications, and some of
which can be informed by other parallel fields of research, e.g.
community-based or biodiversity analyses.

This special feature will highlight recent technological advances that
address some of the challenges unique to sampling rare species using eDNA,
which may comprise developments in sample collection, downstream laboratory
processing or assay design, bioinformatic processing and reference
libraries, or data analysis methods. These methods apply broadly to rare
taxa living in aquatic environments, including but not limited to: marine
mammals, rare fishes and aquatic invertebrates, turtles, aquatic
amphibians, emerging aquatic pathogens, early-stage invasive species, and
endangered species. In this methods-focused special feature, we will
present new developments that (1) improve our ability to detect rare
species, either in the sampling environment or within the sample itself,
(2) improve our ability to identify/classify rare species, populations, or
individuals, (3) improve our ability to localize the source of eDNA
deposition , or (4) improve our ability to estimate density/abundance of
rare species. In some cases, recent advances in related eDNA fields can
prove informative to aquatic eDNA methods. Air eDNA manuscripts will be
accepted if they can be applied to advancing aquatic eDNA methods for
detecting rare species.


*Methods in Ecology and Evolution*
<https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/2041210X> publishes
high-impact, novel methods in ecology and evolution and facilitates their
uptake by the research community. Submissions to this special feature must
meet the journal's Aims and Scope
<https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/hub/journal/2041210X/aims-and-scope/read-full-aims-and-scope>
.


We seek contributions that address the following topics:

   - Obtaining and using haplotypic and nuclear data from eDNA —
   particularly in connection with population or individual level data.
   - Estimating the abundance or density of populations of rare species
   from eDNA data.
   - Dealing with bias through amplification error, subsampling error,
   primer specificity, etc. Methods to quantify these errors and derive
   unbiased estimates of eDNA sequence abundance.
   - Improving detection rate — for example, with improved experimental
   design, lab and collection protocol optimization, targeted assays,
   optimization of technical and biological replication.
   - Improving classification rate, which may include development of
   complete and accurate reference libraries and data and bioinformatic
   pipelines.
   - eDNA fate and transport- Localizing detections requires an
   understanding of eDNA degradation and movement rates, and how it is
   transported before it is no longer detectable.
   - Emerging molecular approaches — including molecular methods for
   assessing eRNA or methylation from aquatic eDNA samples.

The call for proposals closes on the 29th of June 2025.

To submit a proposal to this Special Feature, please complete the proposal
form here
<https://forms.cloud.microsoft/Pages/ResponsePage.aspx?id=hFWz84YSuEyw3xdjFpjffFDNvAK0yp5Oq7weV7KExkVUM09WTURKVkhUQjJQMlo2TVpKRUlROFRFSy4u>
.

All papers will be assessed by the special feature editors to be invited to
submit to the special feature. For papers that are invited to submit, they
will undergo the same rigorous peer review process as all papers submitted
to *Methods in Ecology and Evolution*, and invitation to submit does not
guarantee eventual acceptance. Accepted papers will be published online
when they are ready and collected into an issue when all papers are ready.

You can read more about the British Ecological Society’s special feature
process here
<https://www.britishecologicalsociety.org/content/how-to-publish-a-special-feature/>
.
<*)))><  <*)))><  <*)))><  <*)))><  <*)))><  <*)))><  <*)))><  <*)))><
Amy M. Van Cise, Ph.D.
(she/her/hers)

Assistant Professor
Whale and Dolphin Ecology Lab <http://amyvancise.com>
University of Washington | School of Aquatic and Fisheries Sciences
1122 NE Boat St, Box 355020
Seattle, WA 98105
Office: FSH 216B
206-221-6118

"My paper was one long gigantic blunder from beginning to end."
-Charles Darwin
_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to