| Literature DB >> 30015804 |
Mark V Brown1, Jodie van de Kamp2, Martin Ostrowski3, Justin R Seymour4, Tim Ingleton5, Lauren F Messer6, Thomas Jeffries7, Nahshon Siboni4, Bonnie Laverock4, Jaume Bibiloni-Isaksson4, Tiffanie M Nelson8, Frank Coman9, Claire H Davies2, Dion Frampton2, Mark Rayner2, Kirianne Goossen2, Stan Robert2, Bronwyn Holmes2, Guy C J Abell2, Pascal Craw2, Tim Kahlke2,4, Swan Li San Sow2, Kirsty McAllister10, Jonathan Windsor10, Michele Skuza11, Ryan Crossing12, Nicole Patten13, Paul Malthouse13, Paul D van Ruth13, Ian Paulsen3, Jed A Fuhrman14, Anthony Richardson15, Jason Koval16, Andrew Bissett2, Anna Fitzgerald17, Tim Moltmann18, Levente Bodrossy2.
Abstract
Sustained observations of microbial dynamics are rare, especially in southern hemisphere waters. The Australian Marine Microbial Biodiversity Initiative (AMMBI) provides methodologically standardized, continental scale, temporal phylogenetic amplicon sequencing data describing Bacteria, Archaea and microbial Eukarya assemblages. Sequence data is linked to extensive physical, biological and chemical oceanographic contextual information. Samples are collected monthly to seasonally from multiple depths at seven sites: Darwin Harbour (Northern Territory), Yongala (Queensland), North Stradbroke Island (Queensland), Port Hacking (New South Wales), Maria Island (Tasmania), Kangaroo Island (South Australia), Rottnest Island (Western Australia). These sites span ~30° of latitude and ~38° longitude, range from tropical to cold temperate zones, and are influenced by both local and globally significant oceanographic and climatic features. All sequence datasets are provided in both raw and processed fashion. Currently 952 samples are publically available for bacteria and archaea which include 88,951,761 bacterial (72,435 unique) and 70,463,079 archaeal (24,205 unique) 16 S rRNA v1-3 gene sequences, and 388 samples are available for eukaryotes which include 39,801,050 (78,463 unique) 18 S rRNA v4 gene sequences.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30015804 PMCID: PMC6049030 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2018.130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1Locations of Australia’s Integrated Marine Observing System (IMOS) National Reference Stations (NRS).
Inset are mean annual sea temperature plots for each month (1-12) and depth from which samples are collected at each station plotted over the range 10 °C to 32 °C, compiled with all CTD data collected during IMOS NRS cruises between June 2009-May 2016.
Details of sample set and data products from AMMBI.
| Geographic Location (NRS Code) | Geoposition; | Depths Sampled (m) | Temporal regime; Range | Climatic Zone | Number of samples | BioProject |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Darwin (DAR) | 12 | 0, 10, 20 | Quarterly; August 2015 – May 2016 | Tropical | 30 | PRJNA385736 |
| Yongala (YON) | 19 | 0, 10, 20, 26 | Monthly; June 2015 – May 2016 | Tropical | 41 | PRJNA385736 |
| North Stradbroke Island (NSI) | 27 | 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 | Monthly; June 2012 – May 2016 | Subtropical | 270 | PRJNA385736 |
| Port Hacking (PHB) | 34 | 0, 10, 25, 50, 75, 100 | Monthly; June 2012 – May 2016 | Subtropical | 258 | PRJNA385736 |
| Maria Island (MAI) | 42 | 0, 10, 20, 40, 50, 75, 85 | Monthly; July 2012 – May 2016 | Temperate | 263 | PRJNA385736 |
| Kangaroo Island (KAI) | 35 | 0, 10, 20, 50, 75, 100 | Quarterly; June 2015 – May 2016 | Subtropical | 30 | PRJNA385736 |
| Rottnest Island (ROT) | 32 | 0, 10, 20, 30, 40, 46 | Monthly; July 2015 – May 2016 | Subtropical | 60 | PRJNA385736 |
Locus specific primer sequences.
| Primer Target: Name | Primer Sequences | Primer Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Bacteria 16S: 27f | AGAGTTTGATCMTGGCTCAG | [ |
| Archaea 16S: A2f/Arch21f | TTCCGGTTGATCCYGCCGGA | [ |
| Bacteria/Archaea 16S: 519r | GWATTACCGCGGCKGCTG | [ |
| Eukaryote 18S: TAReuk454FWD1 | CCAGCASCYGCGGTAATTCC | [ |
| Eukaryote 18S: TAReuk- Rev3 | ACTTTCGTTCTTGATYRATGATCTRYATC | [ |
Figure 2A molecular overview of microbial assemblages retrieved from surface waters at seven IMOS NRS around Australia.
Profiles display the relative abundance of a) bacterial, b) plastid and c) archaeal taxa contributing to>0.1% of combined 16 S rRNA reads in samples collected at 0 m and 10 m depths over the course of the study. One two litre sample per depth was collected during each NRS sample trip (except Darwin where three samples per depth were taken at three hour intervals on two of the quarterly trips) and one DNA extraction and amplicon PCR performed per sample (MAI n= 81, PHB=87, NSI=90, YON=21, KAI=10, ROT=20, DAR=21). For this analysis, bacterial and archaeal taxonomic assignments were made using the GreenGenes database[30] (release 13.5) and reads corresponding to chloroplast sequences were removed from the bacterial dataset and analysed independently with taxonomy assigned using the PhytoRef database based on 6,490 plastid 16 S rRNA gene sequences. Scripts used to generate Figs. 2 and 3 are available on Github at https://github.com/martinostrowski/marinemicrobes.
Figure 3A molecular overview of eukaryotic taxa retrieved from surface waters at seven IMOS NRS around Australia.
Profiles display the relative abundance of a) all taxa contributing to>0.1% of combined 18 S rRNA reads in samples collected at 0 m and 10 m depths over the course of the study. Sample details as per Fig. 2. More detailed taxonomic resolution is provided for b) the Archeaplastida and Hacrobia, (c) the Diatoms (Bacilliarophyta), (d) the Opisthokonts, (e) the Dinophyceae and (f) the Stramenopiles (other than diatoms). Note the scale differences for plots B-F which reflect the abundance of sequences for each subgroup in the entire dataset.