Brett P. Olds
University of Notre Dame
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Featured researches published by Brett P. Olds.
Molecular Ecology Resources | 2016
Nathan T. Evans; Brett P. Olds; Mark A. Renshaw; Cameron R. Turner; Yiyuan Li; Christopher L. Jerde; Andrew R. Mahon; Michael E. Pfrender; Gary A. Lamberti; David M. Lodge
Freshwater fauna are particularly sensitive to environmental change and disturbance. Management agencies frequently use fish and amphibian biodiversity as indicators of ecosystem health and a way to prioritize and assess management strategies. Traditional aquatic bioassessment that relies on capture of organisms via nets, traps and electrofishing gear typically has low detection probabilities for rare species and can injure individuals of protected species. Our objective was to determine whether environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling and metabarcoding analysis can be used to accurately measure species diversity in aquatic assemblages with differing structures. We manipulated the density and relative abundance of eight fish and one amphibian species in replicated 206‐L mesocosms. Environmental DNA was filtered from water samples, and six mitochondrial gene fragments were Illumina‐sequenced to measure species diversity in each mesocosm. Metabarcoding detected all nine species in all treatment replicates. Additionally, we found a modest, but positive relationship between species abundance and sequencing read abundance. Our results illustrate the potential for eDNA sampling and metabarcoding approaches to improve quantification of aquatic species diversity in natural environments and point the way towards using eDNA metabarcoding as an index of macrofaunal species abundance.
Molecular Ecology Resources | 2015
Mark A. Renshaw; Brett P. Olds; Christopher L. Jerde; Margaret McVeigh; David M. Lodge
Current research targeting filtered macrobial environmental DNA (eDNA) often relies upon cold ambient temperatures at various stages, including the transport of water samples from the field to the laboratory and the storage of water and/or filtered samples in the laboratory. This poses practical limitations for field collections in locations where refrigeration and frozen storage is difficult or where samples must be transported long distances for further processing and screening. This study demonstrates the successful preservation of eDNA at room temperature (20 °C) in two lysis buffers, CTAB and Longmires, over a 2‐week period of time. Moreover, the preserved eDNA samples were seamlessly integrated into a phenol–chloroform–isoamyl alcohol (PCI) DNA extraction protocol. The successful application of the eDNA extraction to multiple filter membrane types suggests the methods evaluated here may be broadly applied in future eDNA research. Our results also suggest that for many kinds of studies recently reported on macrobial eDNA, detection probabilities could have been increased, and at a lower cost, by utilizing the Longmires preservation buffer with a PCI DNA extraction.
Insect Molecular Biology | 2012
Brett P. Olds; Brad S. Coates; Laura D. Steele; Weilin Sun; Tolulope A. Agunbiade; Kyong Sup Yoon; Joseph P. Strycharz; Si Hyeock Lee; Ken N. Paige; John M. Clark; Barry R. Pittendrigh
Head and body lice are both blood‐feeding parasites of humans although only the body louse is a potent disease vector. In spite of numerous morphological and life history differences, head and body lice have recently been hypothesized to be ecotypes of the same species. We took a comparative genomics approach to measure nucleotide diversity by comparing expressed sequence tag data sets from head and body lice. A total of 10 771 body louse and 10 770 head louse transcripts were predicted from a combined assembly of Roche 454 and Illumina sequenced cDNAs from whole body tissues collected at all life stages and during pesticide exposure and bacterial infection treatments. Illumina reads mapped to the 10 775 draft body louse gene models from the whole genome assembly predicted nine presence/absence differences, but PCR confirmation resulted in a single gene difference. Read per million base pair estimates indicated that 14 genes showed significant differential expression between head and body lice under our treatment conditions. One novel microRNA was predicted in both lice species and 99% of the 544 transcripts from Candidatus riesia indicate that they share the same endosymbiont. Overall, few differences exist, which supports the hypothesis that these two organisms are ecotypes of the same species.
Ecology and Evolution | 2016
Brett P. Olds; Christopher L. Jerde; Mark A. Renshaw; Yiyuan Li; Nathan T. Evans; Cameron R. Turner; Kristy Deiner; Andrew R. Mahon; Michael A. Brueseke; Patrick D. Shirey; Michael E. Pfrender; David M. Lodge; Gary A. Lamberti
Abstract The foundation for any ecological study and for the effective management of biodiversity in natural systems requires knowing what species are present in an ecosystem. We assessed fish communities in a stream using two methods, depletion‐based electrofishing and environmental DNA metabarcoding (eDNA) from water samples, to test the hypothesis that eDNA provides an alternative means of determining species richness and species identities for a natural ecosystem. In a northern Indiana stream, electrofishing yielded a direct estimate of 12 species and a mean estimated richness (Chao II estimator) of 16.6 species with a 95% confidence interval from 12.8 to 42.2. eDNA sampling detected an additional four species, congruent with the mean Chao II estimate from electrofishing. This increased detection rate for fish species between methods suggests that eDNA sampling can enhance estimation of fish fauna in flowing waters while having minimal sampling impacts on fish and their habitat. Modern genetic approaches therefore have the potential to transform our ability to build a more complete list of species for ecological investigations and inform management of aquatic ecosystems.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2016
Christopher L. Jerde; Brett P. Olds; Arial J. Shogren; Elizabeth A. Andruszkiewicz; Andrew R. Mahon; Diogo Bolster; Jennifer L. Tank
While environmental DNA (eDNA) is now being regularly used to detect rare and elusive species, detection in lotic environments comes with a caveat: The species being detected is likely some distance upstream from the point of sampling. Here, we conduct a series of seminatural stream experiments to test the sensitivity of new digital droplet PCR (ddPCR) to detect low concentrations of eDNA in a lotic system, measure the residence time of eDNA compared to a conservative tracer, and we model the transport of eDNA in this system. We found that while ddPCR improves our sensitivity of detection, the residence time and transport of eDNA does not follow the same dynamics as the conservative tracer and necessitates a more stochastic framework for modeling eDNA transport. There was no evidence for differences in the transport of eDNA due to substrate type. The relatively large amount of unexplained variability in eDNA transport reveals the need for uncovering mechanisms and processes by which eDNA is transported downstream leading to species detections, particularly when inferences are to be made in natural systems where eDNA is being used for conservation management.
Lake and Reservoir Management | 2011
Brett P. Olds; Brian C. Peterson; Keith D. Koupal; Kerri M. Farnsworth-Hoback; Casey W. Schoenebeck; W. Wyatt Hoback
Abstract Increased anthropogenic disturbance to watersheds and rivers is exacerbating the effects of oscillating wet-dry periods common in the Midwestern United States, consequently impacting the maintenance and health of lake and reservoir systems. A change in flow regime should affect water quality parameters in reservoirs, but few data exist to document such changes. During a four-year drought, the mean water volume of Harlan County Reservoir, in south-central Nebraska, dropped more than 50%, changing this irrigation reservoir from a lotic to a lentic system. We monitored changes in chlorophyll a, turbidity, temperature and dissolved oxygen over 7 months (April–October) during 2003–2006 (drought conditions) and 2007–2009 (normal conditions) at 15 locations. Chlorophyll a and turbidity were both significantly greater during drought conditions in most months. Dissolved oxygen predominately decreased during drought conditions, while water temperature did not change. Chlorophyll a and turbidity were also greater in the upper (river inflow) than the lower (near dam) reaches of the reservoir during the drought, but were similar during normal years. The observed substantial increases in chlorophyll a levels caused the reservoir to be classified as hypereutrophic, using the Trophic State Index, during drought years but eutrophic during normal years. These data emphasize the need to include precipitation and inflow patterns when examining water quality parameters and assigning trophic status to a particular water body.
Environmental Science & Technology | 2015
Scott P. Egan; Erin K. Grey; Brett P. Olds; Jeffery L. Feder; Steven Ruggiero; Carol E. Tanner; David M. Lodge
Invasive species introduced via the ballast water of commercial ships cause enormous environmental and economic damage worldwide. Accurate monitoring for these often microscopic and morphologically indistinguishable species is challenging but critical for mitigating damages. We apply eDNA sampling, which involves the filtering and subsequent DNA extraction of microscopic bits of tissue suspended in water, to ballast and harbor water sampled during a commercial ships 1400 km voyage through the North American Great Lakes. Using a lab-based gel electrophoresis assay and a rapid, field-ready light transmission spectroscopy (LTS) assay, we test for the presence of two invasive species: quagga (Dreissena bugensis) and zebra (D. polymorpha) mussels. Furthermore, we spiked a set of uninfested ballast and harbor samples with zebra mussel tissue to further test each assays detection capabilities. In unmanipulated samples, zebra mussel was not detected, while quagga mussel was detected in all samples at a rate of 85% for the gel assay and 100% for the LTS assay. In the spiked experimental samples, both assays detected zebra mussel in 94% of spiked samples and 0% of negative controls. Overall, these results demonstrate that eDNA sampling is effective for monitoring ballast-mediated invasions and that LTS has the potential for rapid, field-based detection.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences | 2014
Kevin P. Johnson; Julie M. Allen; Brett P. Olds; Lawrence Mugisha; David L. Reed; Ken N. Paige; Barry R. Pittendrigh
The rate of DNA mutation and divergence is highly variable across the tree of life. However, the reasons underlying this variation are not well understood. Comparing the rates of genetic changes between hosts and parasite lineages that diverged at the same time is one way to begin to understand differences in genetic mutation and substitution rates. Such studies have indicated that the rate of genetic divergence in parasites is often faster than that of their hosts when comparing single genes. However, the variation in this relative rate of molecular evolution across different genes in the genome is unknown. We compared the rate of DNA sequence divergence between humans, chimpanzees and their ectoparasitic lice for 1534 protein-coding genes across their genomes. The rate of DNA substitution in these orthologous genes was on average 14 times faster for lice than for humans and chimpanzees. In addition, these rates were positively correlated across genes. Because this correlation only occurred for substitutions that changed the amino acid, this pattern is probably produced by similar functional constraints across the same genes in humans, chimpanzees and their ectoparasites.
Scientific Reports | 2017
Arial J. Shogren; Jennifer L. Tank; Elizabeth A. Andruszkiewicz; Brett P. Olds; Andrew R. Mahon; Christopher L. Jerde; Diogo Bolster
Advances in detection of genetic material from species in aquatic ecosystems, including environmental DNA (eDNA), have improved species monitoring and management. eDNA from target species can readily move in streams and rivers and the goal is to measure it, and with that infer where and how abundant species are, adding great value to delimiting species invasions, monitoring and protecting rare species, and estimating biodiversity. To date, we lack an integrated framework that identifies environmental factors that control eDNA movement in realistic, complex, and heterogeneous flowing waters. To this end, using an empirical approach and a simple conceptual model, we propose a framework of how eDNA is transported, retained, and resuspended in stream systems. Such an understanding of eDNA dispersal in streams will be essential for designing optimized sampling protocols and subsequently estimating biomass or organismal abundance. We also discuss guiding principles for more effective use of eDNA methods, highlighting the necessity of understanding these parameters for use in future predictive modeling of eDNA transport.
Insect Molecular Biology | 2014
Domenic J. Previte; Brett P. Olds; Kyong Sup Yoon; Weilin Sun; William M. Muir; Ken N. Paige; Si Hyeock Lee; John M. Clark; Jane E. Koehler; Barry R. Pittendrigh
Human head and body lice are obligatory hematophagous ectoparasites that belong to a single species, Pediculus humanus. Only body lice, however, are vectors of the infectious Gram‐negative bacterium Bartonella quintana. Because of their near identical genomes, yet differential vector competence, head and body lice provide a unique model system to study the gain or loss of vector competence. Using our in vitro louse‐rearing system, we infected head and body lice with blood containing B. quintana in order to detect both differences in the proliferation of B. quintana and transcriptional differences of immune‐related genes in the lice. B. quintana proliferated rapidly in body lice at 6 days post‐infection, but plateaued in head lice at 4 days post‐infection. RNAseq and quantitative real‐time PCR validation analyses determined gene expression differences. Eight immunoresponse genes were observed to be significantly different with many associated with the Toll pathway: Fibrinogen‐like protein, Spaetzle, Defensin 1, Serpin, Scavenger receptor A and Apolipoporhrin 2. Our findings support the hypothesis that body lice, unlike head lice, fight infection from B. quintana only at the later stages of its proliferation.