TY - JOUR
T1 - A DNA Barcode Dataset for the Aquatic Fauna of the Panama Canal
T2 - Novel Resources for Detecting Faunal Change in the Neotropics
AU - Saltonstall, Kristin
AU - Collin, Rachel
AU - Aguilar, Celestino
AU - Alda, Fernando
AU - Baldrich-Mora, Laura M.
AU - Bravo, Victor
AU - Castillo, María Fernanda
AU - Castro, Sheril
AU - De León, Luis F.
AU - Díaz-Ferguson, Edgardo
AU - Garcés, Humberto A.
AU - Gómez, Eyda
AU - González, Rigoberto G.
AU - González-Torres, Maribel A.
AU - Guzman, Hector M.
AU - Hiller, Alexandra
AU - Ibáñez, Roberto
AU - Jaramillo, César
AU - Kaiser, Klara L.
AU - Kam, Yulang
AU - Lemus Peralta, Mayra
AU - Lopez, Oscar G.
AU - Madrid C, Maycol E.
AU - Miller, Matthew J.
AU - Ossa-Hernandez, Natalia
AU - Reina, Ruth G.
AU - Robertson, D. Ross
AU - Romero-Gonzalez, Tania E.
AU - Sandoval, Milton
AU - Sanjur, Oris
AU - Schlöder, Carmen
AU - Sharpe, Ashley E.
AU - Sharpe, Diana
AU - Siepmann, Jakob
AU - Strasiewsky, David
AU - Torchin, Mark E.
AU - Tumbaco, Melany
AU - Vargas, Marta
AU - Venegas-Anaya, Miryam
AU - Victor, Benjamin C.
AU - Castellanos-Galindo, Gustavo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 by the authors.
PY - 2025/7
Y1 - 2025/7
N2 - DNA metabarcoding is a powerful biodiversity monitoring tool, enabling simultaneous assessments of diverse biological communities. However, its accuracy depends on the reliability of reference databases that assign taxonomic identities to obtained sequences. Here we provide a DNA barcode dataset for aquatic fauna of the Panama Canal, a region that connects the Western Atlantic and Eastern Pacific oceans. This unique setting creates opportunities for trans-oceanic dispersal while acting as a modern physical dispersal barrier for some terrestrial organisms. We sequenced 852 specimens from a diverse array of taxa (e.g., fishes, zooplankton, mollusks, arthropods, reptiles, birds, and mammals) using COI, and in some cases, 12S and 16S barcodes. These data were collected for a variety of studies, many of which have sought to understand recent changes in aquatic communities in the Panama Canal. The DNA barcodes presented here are all from captured specimens, which confirms their presence in Panama and, in many cases, inside the Panama Canal. Both native and introduced taxa are included. This dataset represents a valuable resource for environmental DNA (eDNA) work in the Panama Canal region and across the Neotropics aimed at monitoring ecosystem health, tracking non-native and potentially invasive species, and understanding the ecology and distribution of these freshwater and euryhaline taxa. Dataset: 10.25573/data.28899749; https://boldsystems.org, BOLD Projects: BSFFA, BSCFA, PCIF, PCPL, PCINV, INVPA, DS-BPUSNM. Dataset License: CC-BY.
AB - DNA metabarcoding is a powerful biodiversity monitoring tool, enabling simultaneous assessments of diverse biological communities. However, its accuracy depends on the reliability of reference databases that assign taxonomic identities to obtained sequences. Here we provide a DNA barcode dataset for aquatic fauna of the Panama Canal, a region that connects the Western Atlantic and Eastern Pacific oceans. This unique setting creates opportunities for trans-oceanic dispersal while acting as a modern physical dispersal barrier for some terrestrial organisms. We sequenced 852 specimens from a diverse array of taxa (e.g., fishes, zooplankton, mollusks, arthropods, reptiles, birds, and mammals) using COI, and in some cases, 12S and 16S barcodes. These data were collected for a variety of studies, many of which have sought to understand recent changes in aquatic communities in the Panama Canal. The DNA barcodes presented here are all from captured specimens, which confirms their presence in Panama and, in many cases, inside the Panama Canal. Both native and introduced taxa are included. This dataset represents a valuable resource for environmental DNA (eDNA) work in the Panama Canal region and across the Neotropics aimed at monitoring ecosystem health, tracking non-native and potentially invasive species, and understanding the ecology and distribution of these freshwater and euryhaline taxa. Dataset: 10.25573/data.28899749; https://boldsystems.org, BOLD Projects: BSFFA, BSCFA, PCIF, PCPL, PCINV, INVPA, DS-BPUSNM. Dataset License: CC-BY.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011974369
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011974369#tab=citedBy
U2 - 10.3390/data10070108
DO - 10.3390/data10070108
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105011974369
SN - 2306-5729
VL - 10
JO - Data
JF - Data
IS - 7
M1 - 108
ER -