| Literature DB >> 29367878 |
Ezequiel M Marzinelli1,2,3, Zhiguang Qiu1,2, Katherine A Dafforn2,4, Emma L Johnston4, Peter D Steinberg1,2,3, Mariana Mayer-Pinto2,4.
Abstract
Host-associated microbial communities play a fundamental role in the life of eukaryotic hosts. It is increasingly argued that hosts and their microbiota must be studied together as 'holobionts' to better understand the effects of environmental stressors on host functioning. Disruptions of host-microbiota interactions by environmental stressors can negatively affect host performance and survival. Substantial ecological impacts are likely when the affected hosts are habitat-forming species (e.g., trees, kelps) that underpin local biodiversity. In marine systems, coastal urbanisation via the addition of artificial structures is a major source of stress to habitat formers, but its effect on their associated microbial communities is unknown. We characterised kelp-associated microbial communities in two of the most common and abundant artificial structures in Sydney Harbour-pier-pilings and seawalls-and in neighbouring natural rocky reefs. The kelp Ecklonia radiata is the dominant habitat-forming species along 8000 km of the temperate Australian coast. Kelp-associated microbial communities on pilings differed significantly from those on seawalls and natural rocky reefs, possibly due to differences in abiotic (e.g., shade) and biotic (e.g., grazing) factors between habitats. Many bacteria that were more abundant on kelp on pilings belonged to taxa often associated with macroalgal diseases, including tissue bleaching in Ecklonia. There were, however, no differences in kelp photosynthetic capacity between habitats. The observed differences in microbial communities may have negative effects on the host by promoting fouling by macroorganisms or by causing and spreading disease over time. This study demonstrates that urbanisation can alter the microbiota of key habitat-forming species with potential ecological consequences.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29367878 PMCID: PMC5772048 DOI: 10.1038/s41522-017-0044-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Biofilms Microbiomes ISSN: 2055-5008 Impact factor: 7.290
Fig. 1Location of study sites. Map of Sydney Harbour (b, c), Australia (a), showing the locations from where kelp-associated microbiomes were sampled. R rocky reefs, S seawalls, P pier-pilings. Scale bar: 6 km
Fig. 2Kelp-associated microbial communities in the three habitat types. nMDS based on the a Bray–Curtis or b Jaccard measure on square-root transformed relative abundances of OTUs on kelp in the three habitat types sampled: natural rocky reefs (green symbols), seawalls (blue symbols) and pilings (red symbols). Different shapes represent the different sites sampled in each habitat type
PERMANOVA analyses based on (a) Bray–Curtis and (b) Jaccard measures of square-root transformed relative abundances of OTUs associated to the surfaces of kelp in each habitat type (Ha, fixed; rocky reef ‘R’, seawalls ‘S’ and pilings ‘P’) and site (Si, random, nested in habitat, with four levels each)
| (a) Bray–Curtis | (b) Jaccard | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | d | MS | Pseudo- |
| MS | Pseudo- |
|
| Ha | 2 | 6946.2 | 2.1709 |
| 6527.9 | 1.6339 |
|
| Si(Ha) | 9 | 3199.7 | 2.0146 |
| 3995.2 | 1.3491 |
|
| Res | 36 | 1588.3 | 2961.3 | ||||
| Total | 47 |
Pairwise tests: R ≠ P, S ≠ P, S = R (for Bray–Curtis and Jaccard)
Fig. 3Differences in abundances of the dominant OTUs between habitat types. Mean relative abundances (+s.e.m., n = 16) of OTUs found to differ strongly between the three habitat types sampled: natural rocky reefs (green bars), seawalls (blue bars) and pilings (red bars) (p phylum, c class, o order, f family, g genus, s species). a OTUs with relative abudances greater than 4%; b OTUs with relative abundances smaller than 4%