Fate and transport of environmental DNA: mapping the knowns and unknowns | Research Square window.SnipcartSettings = { analytics: { enabled: false } }; (function() { var accessVector = localStorage.getItem('access_vector') || ''; window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; if (accessVector) { window.dataLayer.push({ user: { profile: { profileInfo: { snid: accessVector } } } }); } })(); (function(w,d,s,l,i){w[l]=w[l]||[];w[l].push({'gtm.start':new Date().getTime(),event:'gtm.js'});var f=d.getElementsByTagName(s)[0],j=d.createElement(s),dl=l!='dataLayer'?'&l='+l:'';j.async=true;j.src='https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtm.js?id='+i+dl;f.parentNode.insertBefore(j,f);})(window,document,'script','dataLayer','GTM-K279D39R'); Browse Preprints In Review Journals COVID-19 Preprints AJE Video Bytes Research Tools Research Promotion AJE Professional Editing AJE Rubriq About Preprint Platform In Review Editorial Policies Our Team Advisory Board Help Center Sign In Submit a Preprint Cite Share Download PDF Systematic Review Fate and transport of environmental DNA: mapping the knowns and unknowns Pedro FP Brandão-Dias, Elizabeth Andruszkiewicz Allan, Elise D. Snyder, and 7 more This is a preprint; it has not been peer reviewed by a journal. https://doi.org/ 10.21203/rs.3.rs-8329740/v1 This work is licensed under a CC BY 4.0 License Status: Posted Version 1 posted You are reading this latest preprint version Abstract The use of environmental DNA (eDNA) in routine biomonitoring is transforming our ability to detect and quantify aquatic species. However, translating these indirect molecular detections into ecological insight requires understanding how long eDNA persists and how it moves through the environment. Here, we present a systematic mapping review of the controls on eDNA fate and transport and provide the most comprehensive synthesis to date of mechanistic evidence across aquatic systems. Drawing on over 200 manuscripts, we introduce the concept of the eDNA profile, defined by state, molecular properties, and molecular origin, as a unifying framework for interpreting why eDNA signals differ across environments and taxa. Where eDNA profile has been quantified, source, state, particle size, fragment length, and molecular origin measurably alter decay and transport, confirming that different eDNA forms experience distinct fates and movement distances within aquatic systems. Using this lens, we then synthesize the evidence for the effects of abiotic factors, biotic factors, and transport on eDNA fate. For abiotic factors, we find that temperature, pH, nutrients, suspended particles, substrates, dissolved organic matter, and dissolved oxygen measurably modulate eDNA decay, whereas light exposure (UV and visible light) and salinity show weak or no direct effects across studies. For biotic factors, we conclude that microbial activity, extracellular enzymes, and biofilms are likely major drivers of eDNA degradation, although the identities, functions, and dynamics of responsible communities are poorly resolved. Finally, we show that transport patterns differ strongly among aquatic systems, with depth-structured and short-range signals common in lakes, highly variable downstream distances in rivers that depend on discharge and eDNA particle size, and longer potential transport in coastal and open-ocean systems that often still yield predominantly local signals. In these advective environments, robust interpretation commonly requires coupling eDNA observations with hydrological and oceanographic circulation models. Finally, we highlight three priorities for a predictive framework: (1) explicitly resolve eDNA profiles, (2) isolate the causal mechanisms that govern decay and removal, and (3) identify which microbes and microbial processes drive degradation across environments. Our goal is to integrate the field, highlight critical gaps, and ultimately advance the interpretation of eDNA-based detections for biodiversity monitoring. Molecular Biology Marine and Freshwater Ecology eDNA environmental DNA decay transport freshwater saltwater review knowledge gaps mechanisms eDNA profile Full Text Additional Declarations The authors declare no competing interests. Supplementary Files Manuscriptsandfindings.xlsx Cite Share Download PDF Status: Posted Version 1 posted You are reading this latest preprint version Research Square lets you share your work early, gain feedback from the community, and start making changes to your manuscript prior to peer review in a journal. As a division of Research Square Company, we’re committed to making research communication faster, fairer, and more useful. We do this by developing innovative software and high quality services for the global research community. Our growing team is made up of researchers and industry professionals working together to solve the most critical problems facing scientific publishing. Also discoverable on Platform About Our Team In Review Editorial Policies Advisory Board Help Center Resources Author Services Accessibility API Access RSS feed Manage Cookie Preferences © Research Square 2026 | ISSN 2693-5015 (online) Privacy Policy Terms of Service Do Not Sell My Personal Information {"props":{"pageProps":{"initialData":{"identity":"rs-8329740","acceptedTermsAndConditions":true,"allowDirectSubmit":true,"archivedVersions":[],"articleType":"Systematic Review","associatedPublications":[],"authors":[{"id":558392201,"identity":"9d5563f6-b836-4aee-ac55-3ed40e268111","order_by":0,"name":"Pedro FP Brandão-Dias","email":"data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAZAAAAAyAQMAAABI0h/eAAAABlBMVEX///8AAABVwtN+AAAACXBIWXMAAA7EAAAOxAGVKw4bAAAA5UlEQVRIiWNgGAWjYHACAyA+wNjewHwMzGVjJ1ZLzwG2NAaGBKAWZuK18JiBtTAQ0mLO3rztwweGO7I90j3fHnz8sU2ej5mB8cPHHNxaLHuOFc+cwfDMuEfm7HbDGQm3DduYGZglZ27D46obOcbMPAyHE/dL5G6T5km4zQjUwsbMi0/L/TcQLT0SOc9AWuwJa7nBA9fCBtKSSFCLZU9aMSPEL8fMJGek3U5uY2ZsxusXc/bDmxkgIdb8TOKDzW3b+e3NBz98xOcwEMH4D0hIwMUYG3Crh2kBAwk8qkbBKBgFo2BkAwAniE8vwx7orwAAAABJRU5ErkJggg==","orcid":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8583-0617","institution":"University of Washington","correspondingAuthor":true,"prefix":"","firstName":"Pedro","middleName":"FP","lastName":"Brandão-Dias","suffix":""},{"id":558392202,"identity":"ea15198c-7008-4a8b-8156-466eab73695b","order_by":1,"name":"Elizabeth Andruszkiewicz Allan","email":"","orcid":"","institution":"University of Washington","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Elizabeth","middleName":"Andruszkiewicz","lastName":"Allan","suffix":""},{"id":558392203,"identity":"30b53f5b-ba7f-43c5-9e69-7544877b3171","order_by":2,"name":"Elise D. Snyder","email":"","orcid":"https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3135-818X","institution":"Illinois Natural History Survey","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Elise","middleName":"D.","lastName":"Snyder","suffix":""},{"id":558392204,"identity":"bc644c5b-e69e-49f2-8549-7ff15a6c4a6f","order_by":3,"name":"Ryan Guillemette","email":"","orcid":"","institution":"Southern California Coastal Water Research Project (SCCWRP)","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Ryan","middleName":"","lastName":"Guillemette","suffix":""},{"id":558392205,"identity":"8def5ed1-6403-4674-a671-768c52d0bca2","order_by":4,"name":"Lauren Sassoubre","email":"","orcid":"","institution":"University of San Francisco","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Lauren","middleName":"","lastName":"Sassoubre","suffix":""},{"id":558392206,"identity":"6854b6a8-abda-47aa-b011-38e59be12862","order_by":5,"name":"Bettina Thalinger","email":"","orcid":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9315-8648","institution":"Universitat Innsbruck","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Bettina","middleName":"","lastName":"Thalinger","suffix":""},{"id":558392207,"identity":"93b73de8-1174-4972-8dd5-76c1fd7edc52","order_by":6,"name":"Alexandria B. Boehm","email":"","orcid":"https://orcid.org/0000-0002-8162-5090","institution":"Stanford University","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Alexandria","middleName":"B.","lastName":"Boehm","suffix":""},{"id":558392208,"identity":"56be7e48-08c1-475d-ab33-f43573a8ef2a","order_by":7,"name":"Kristy Deiner","email":"","orcid":"","institution":"ETH Zurich","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Kristy","middleName":"","lastName":"Deiner","suffix":""},{"id":558392209,"identity":"9ba08766-d96b-4999-9bc5-27d8596c7f8f","order_by":8,"name":"Ryan P. Kelly","email":"","orcid":"https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5037-2441","institution":"University of Washington","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Ryan","middleName":"P.","lastName":"Kelly","suffix":""},{"id":558392210,"identity":"24707aaf-7706-4c49-ada6-9af414f6dc8b","order_by":9,"name":"Susanna Theroux","email":"","orcid":"https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9812-7856","institution":"Southern California Coastal Water Research Project (SCCWRP)","correspondingAuthor":false,"prefix":"","firstName":"Susanna","middleName":"","lastName":"Theroux","suffix":""}],"badges":[],"createdAt":"2025-12-10 17:07:36","currentVersionCode":1,"declarations":{"humanSubjects":false,"vertebrateSubjects":false,"conflictsOfInterestStatement":false,"humanSubjectEthicalGuidelines":false,"humanSubjectConsent":false,"humanSubjectClinicalTrial":false,"humanSubjectCaseReport":false,"vertebrateSubjectEthicalGuidelines":false},"doi":"10.21203/rs.3.rs-8329740/v1","doiUrl":"https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-8329740/v1","draftVersion":[],"editorialEvents":[],"editorialNote":"","failedWorkflow":false,"files":[{"id":98427865,"identity":"5e07c0b9-4469-46d9-b4ee-fef1302ec1f6","added_by":"auto","created_at":"2025-12-17 16:41:17","extension":"pdf","order_by":1,"title":"","display":"","copyAsset":false,"role":"manuscript-pdf","size":1173200,"visible":true,"origin":"","legend":"","description":"","filename":"eDNAfate2025Dec2025PB.pdf","url":"https://assets-eu.researchsquare.com/files/rs-8329740/v1_covered_cb70cf6d-6660-45a6-9822-482762fc1f1f.pdf"},{"id":98034316,"identity":"9bd50478-1a3e-4f0f-aca8-e2f5b30eff03","added_by":"auto","created_at":"2025-12-12 05:40:08","extension":"xlsx","order_by":1,"title":"","display":"","copyAsset":false,"role":"supplement","size":72823,"visible":true,"origin":"","legend":"","description":"","filename":"Manuscriptsandfindings.xlsx","url":"https://assets-eu.researchsquare.com/files/rs-8329740/v1/bd35db3e1d6879755d1bdcee.xlsx"}],"financialInterests":"The authors declare no competing interests.","formattedTitle":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cstrong\u003eFate and transport of environmental DNA: mapping the knowns and unknowns\u003c/strong\u003e\u003c/p\u003e","fulltext":[],"fulltextSource":"","fullText":"","funders":[],"hasAdminPriorityOnWorkflow":false,"hasManuscriptDocX":false,"hasOptedInToPreprint":true,"hasPassedJournalQc":"","hasAnyPriority":true,"hideJournal":true,"highlight":"","institution":"National Philanthropic Trust","isAcceptedByJournal":false,"isAuthorSuppliedPdf":true,"isDeskRejected":"","isHiddenFromSearch":false,"isInQc":false,"isInWorkflow":false,"isPdf":true,"isPdfUpToDate":true,"isWithdrawnOrRetracted":false,"journal":{"display":true,"email":"
[email protected]","identity":"researchsquare","isNatureJournal":false,"hasQc":true,"allowDirectSubmit":true,"externalIdentity":"","sideBox":"","snPcode":"","submissionUrl":"/submission","title":"Research Square","twitterHandle":"researchsquare","acdcEnabled":true,"dfaEnabled":false,"editorialSystem":"","reportingPortfolio":"","inReviewEnabled":false,"inReviewRevisionsEnabled":true},"keywords":"eDNA, environmental DNA, decay, transport, freshwater, saltwater, review, knowledge gaps, mechanisms, eDNA profile","lastPublishedDoi":"10.21203/rs.3.rs-8329740/v1","lastPublishedDoiUrl":"https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-8329740/v1","license":{"name":"CC BY 4.0","url":"https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/"},"manuscriptAbstract":"\u003cp\u003eThe use of environmental DNA (eDNA) in routine biomonitoring is transforming our ability to detect and quantify aquatic species. However, translating these indirect molecular detections into ecological insight requires understanding how long eDNA persists and how it moves through the environment. Here, we present a systematic mapping review of the controls on eDNA fate and transport and provide the most comprehensive synthesis to date of mechanistic evidence across aquatic systems. Drawing on over 200 manuscripts, we introduce the concept of the eDNA profile, defined by state, molecular properties, and molecular origin, as a unifying framework for interpreting why eDNA signals differ across environments and taxa. Where eDNA profile has been quantified, source, state, particle size, fragment length, and molecular origin measurably alter decay and transport, confirming that different eDNA forms experience distinct fates and movement distances within aquatic systems. Using this lens, we then synthesize the evidence for the effects of abiotic factors, biotic factors, and transport on eDNA fate. For abiotic factors, we find that temperature, pH, nutrients, suspended particles, substrates, dissolved organic matter, and dissolved oxygen measurably modulate eDNA decay, whereas light exposure (UV and visible light) and salinity show weak or no direct effects across studies. For biotic factors, we conclude that microbial activity, extracellular enzymes, and biofilms are likely major drivers of eDNA degradation, although the identities, functions, and dynamics of responsible communities are poorly resolved. Finally, we show that transport patterns differ strongly among aquatic systems, with depth-structured and short-range signals common in lakes, highly variable downstream distances in rivers that depend on discharge and eDNA particle size, and longer potential transport in coastal and open-ocean systems that often still yield predominantly local signals. In these advective environments, robust interpretation commonly requires coupling eDNA observations with hydrological and oceanographic circulation models. Finally, we highlight three priorities for a predictive framework: (1) explicitly resolve eDNA profiles, (2) isolate the causal mechanisms that govern decay and removal, and (3) identify which microbes and microbial processes drive degradation across environments. Our goal is to integrate the field, highlight critical gaps, and ultimately advance the interpretation of eDNA-based detections for biodiversity monitoring.\u003c/p\u003e","manuscriptTitle":"Fate and transport of environmental DNA: mapping the knowns and unknowns","msid":"","msnumber":"","nonDraftVersions":[{"code":1,"date":"2025-12-12 05:40:03","doi":"10.21203/rs.3.rs-8329740/v1","editorialEvents":[{"type":"communityComments","content":0}],"status":"published","journal":{"display":true,"email":"
[email protected]","identity":"researchsquare","isNatureJournal":false,"hasQc":true,"allowDirectSubmit":true,"externalIdentity":"","sideBox":"","snPcode":"","submissionUrl":"/submission","title":"Research Square","twitterHandle":"researchsquare","acdcEnabled":true,"dfaEnabled":false,"editorialSystem":"","reportingPortfolio":"","inReviewEnabled":false,"inReviewRevisionsEnabled":true}}],"origin":"","ownerIdentity":"e756d7e7-db91-4392-abd2-f6334ec997d8","owner":[],"postedDate":"December 12th, 2025","published":true,"recentEditorialEvents":[],"rejectedJournal":[],"revision":"","amendment":"","status":"posted","subjectAreas":[{"id":59440123,"name":"Molecular Biology"},{"id":59440124,"name":"Marine and Freshwater Ecology"}],"tags":[],"updatedAt":"2025-12-12T05:40:04+00:00","versionOfRecord":[],"versionCreatedAt":"2025-12-12 05:40:03","video":"","vorDoi":"","vorDoiUrl":"","workflowStages":[]},"version":"v1","identity":"rs-8329740","journalConfig":"researchsquare"},"__N_SSP":true},"page":"/article/[identity]/[[...version]]","query":{"redirect":"/article/rs-8329740","identity":"rs-8329740","version":["v1"]},"buildId":"8U1c8b4HqxoKbykW_rLl7","isFallback":false,"isExperimentalCompile":false,"dynamicIds":[84888],"gssp":true,"scriptLoader":[]}
Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below.
Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure
cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can
have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy
(via DOI)
is the canonical version.