2021
DOI: 10.1002/edn3.182
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Using terrestrial leeches to assess the genetic diversity of an elusive species: The Annamite striped rabbit Nesolagus timminsi

Abstract: This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Cited by 21 publications
(28 citation statements)
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References 64 publications
(114 reference statements)
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“…Given that iDNA from leech gut contents can be used as a tool to monitor e.g. otherwise elusive and endangered vertebrates (Nguyen et al, 2021;Schnell et al, 2012), it is surprising that non-haemadipsid leeches have been almost completely neglected for this purpose (Williams et al, 2020).…”
Section: Non-haemadipsid Leeches For Animal Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Given that iDNA from leech gut contents can be used as a tool to monitor e.g. otherwise elusive and endangered vertebrates (Nguyen et al, 2021;Schnell et al, 2012), it is surprising that non-haemadipsid leeches have been almost completely neglected for this purpose (Williams et al, 2020).…”
Section: Non-haemadipsid Leeches For Animal Monitoringmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…in Erpobdella as in the present study, it is difficult to assess if the DNA detected is from the leech or from the diet. As has been shown for arthropods (Elbrecht et al, 2018) and recently with rabbit DNA within iDNA of leeches (Nguyen et al, 2021), one way to overcome this is to determine if the leech and diet haplotypes are fully conserved; if a certain haplotype can be evinced from non-gut tissue then seperate haplotypes within the ingesta can infer species-level cannibalism.…”
Section: Technical Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The emerging field of iDNA has therefore contributed to the knowledge of leech diets and leech-derived iDNA is now used as a complementary tool in studies of vertebrate community composition (Schnell et al, 2012;Ji et al, 2020). Such studies have focused almost exclusively on terrestrial bloodfeeding leeches of the family Haemadipsidae (order Hirudiniformes) and have been leveraged to detect vertebrates across their geographic distribution (see Borda et al, 2008), including Asia (Vietnam, Laos, Malaysia, Japan), Africa (Madagascar) and Oceania (Australia and Tasmania) (Abrams et al, 2019;Drinkwater et al, 2019;Fahmy et al, 2019;Ji et al, 2020;Morishima et al, 2020;Nguyen et al, 2021;Schnell et al, 2012Schnell et al, , 2018Tilker et al, 2020). If iDNA from leeches is to be used for biodiversity monitoring elsewhere in the world, the dietary range of members of all other families, including aquatic bloodfeeding, predatory and fluid/tissue-feeding species, will also need to be assessed.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%