| Literature DB >> 29610702 |
Tania Aires1, Alexandra Serebryakova1,2, Frédérique Viard2,3, Ester A Serrão1, Aschwin H Engelen1.
Abstract
Ocean acidification significantly affects marine organisms in several ways, with complex interactions. Seaweeds might benefit from rising CO2 through increased photosynthesis andEntities:
Keywords: Algae microbiomes; Grazer microbiomes; Invasive seaweeds; Metabarcoding; Ocean acidification; Sargassum muticum; Synisoma nadejda
Year: 2018 PMID: 29610702 PMCID: PMC5880178 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.4377
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Schematic representation of the mesocosms experiment.
(A) Ambient (380 ppm) and (B) acidified (1,000 ppm) conditions each with four 3 L experimental units only containing 1 g wet weight (WW) S. muticum and four 3 L experimental units containing 1 g WW S. muticum along with the grazer S. nadejda were placed randomly in each CO2 treatment. Each unit represented a replicate from which sample(s) (seaweed or seaweed and grazer) were taken.
Figure 2Community structure.
Plot of canonical analysis of principal coordinates (CAP) based on Bray–Curtis distances calculated on square-root transformed bacterial abundances, showing the axes that best discriminate the bacterial assemblages across CO2 levels (blue-ambient versus red-acidified), grazing by S. nadejda on S. muticum (open squares-grazed seaweed vs filled squares-non-grazed seaweed) and the gut of the isopod on a diet of S. muticum (circles).
Figure 3Host and treatment effects on associated bacteria phyla.
Relative abundance and distribution of the bacteria phyla associated to the brown seaweed Sargassum muticum, without (No grazing) and with (grazing) Synisoma nadejda isopods, and the gut of the isopod after three weeks on a Sargassum muticum diet, under ambient (380 ppm) and elevated/acidified (1,000 ppm) CO2 conditions.
Figure 4Relative abundance of the genera belonging to the main bacterial phyla.
(A) Bacteroidetes, (B) Proteobacteria, and (C) Planctomycetes, associated with the brown seaweed Sargassum muticum grazed by Synisoma nadejda isopods (left side), and the gut microbiome of the isopod on a Sargassum muticum diet (right side), after three weeks under ambient (380 ppm; −CO2) and elevated/acidified (1,000 ppm; +CO2) CO2 conditions.
Figure 5Mean relative abundances of bacterial classes, and respective orders (A, Flavobacteriales and Ricketsiales; B, Bdellovibrionales and Oceanospirillales; C, Acidithiobacillales; D, Alteromonadales; E, Non-ID SJA-4 and AKAU3564 Phycisphaerae), significantly more abundant in either grazed Sargassum muticum or the gut of Synisoma nadejda.
After three weeks under ambient (380 ppm) and elevated/acidified (1,000 ppm) CO2 conditions. Alpha = 0.05, error bars show standard error per treatment (n = 4).
Figure 6Core communities.
Venn diagram representing the number of bacterial genera (present in at least 75% of samples) shared between the different CO2 treatments (ambient CO2− ↓ CO2; elevated/acidified CO2− ↑ CO2) and associated to grazed Sargassum muticum (Sm + G), and the gut microbiome of the isopod Synisoma nadejda on a Sargassum muticum diet. The bar plots show the distribution of Phyla of selected intersections.
Figure 7Mean relative abundances of associated bacterial orders.
(A and B) Sargassum muticum under grazing/non grazing influence after three weeks under ambient (380 ppm) and elevated/acidified (1,000 ppm) CO2 conditions and (C–E) grazed Sargassum muticum and the gut of Synisoma nadejda after three weeks under ambient (380 ppm) and elevated/acidified (1,000 ppm) CO2 conditions, that responded to acidification, but for which a significant interaction between acidification and type of sample (seaweed or grazer gut) was observed. Alpha = 0.05, error bars show standard error per treatment (n = 4).