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Scientific Insights

Explore our latest research and findings that drive marine conservation and innovation. From groundbreaking studies to insightful reviews, our publications reflect our commitment to advancing marine science and policy.

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Site-specific variation and non-indigenous species detection in Arabian Gulf biofouling communities using DNA metabarcoding and photographic surveys

by Sahar Chebaane, Eva Aylagas, Juan Sempere-Valverde, Abdulsalam Ardan, Angelo Poliseno, Dylan M. Cottrell, Vitaly Syomin, Imke M. Böök, Louis X. I. V. Simon, Marion Couëdel, Ronald Cadiz, Chakkiath Paul Antony, Marcos A. L. Teixeira, Carolina Bocanegra-Castano, Joao Curdia, August Santillan, Mark Dimech, Baleegh Abukaboos, Lotfi J. Rabaoui, Mohammad A. Qurban, Susana Carvalho
Research article Year: 2026 ISSN: 2045-2322 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-41227-6

Abstract

Ports and marinas are global hotspots for non-indigenous species (NIS), yet biofouling communities in the Arabian Gulf remain poorly documented. Here, we present the first spatially extensive assessment of biofouling communities along ~ 300 km of the Saudi Arabian Gulf coastline. Across 12 sites, we combined COI metabarcoding of scrapings from pontoons/docks and settlement panels with image-based analysis of same panels to characterize taxonomic composition and quantify native, cryptogenic, and non-indigenous taxa. Community analyses revealed a clear site-level differentiation across all datasets, while broader geographic locations and environmental risk categories explained little variation. DNA metabarcoding detected more taxa than visual analyses, including 57 cryptogenic and NIS, many of which could not be visually detected. Industrial and commercial ports harbored higher NIS richness and relative abundance than recreational marinas, indicating localized invasion risk. Despite the sensitivity of DNA-based approaches, species-level assignments must be interpreted cautiously due to sparse regional reference libraries and limited representation of Gulf taxa in global databases. By generating one of the first spatially explicit baselines of biofouling biodiversity and NIS in the northwestern Indian Ocean, our study underscores the urgent need to expand region-specific reference databases and to implement integrated, site-resolved monitoring frameworks to support emerging marine biosecurity programs across this understudied system.

Keywords

Biofouling Bioinvasions DNA metabarcoding Metabarcoding Marinas Non-indigenous species Arabian (Persian) Gulf
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