Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)

Endolithic microbial communities are prominent features of intertidal marine habitats, where they colonize a variety of substrates, contributing to their erosion. Almost 2 centuries worth of naturalistic studies focused on a few true-boring (euendolithic) phototrophs, but substrate preference has re...

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Main Authors: E. Couradeau, D. Roush, B. S. Guida, F. Garcia-Pichel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2017-01-01
Series:Biogeosciences
Online Access:http://www.biogeosciences.net/14/311/2017/bg-14-311-2017.pdf
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spelling doaj-6228bbb5211644d6bf4e2213d7d5992a2020-11-24T23:03:34ZengCopernicus PublicationsBiogeosciences1726-41701726-41892017-01-0114231132410.5194/bg-14-311-2017Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)E. Couradeau0D. Roush1B. S. Guida2F. Garcia-Pichel3School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 85282 Tempe, Arizona, USASchool of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 85282 Tempe, Arizona, USASchool of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 85282 Tempe, Arizona, USASchool of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 85282 Tempe, Arizona, USAEndolithic microbial communities are prominent features of intertidal marine habitats, where they colonize a variety of substrates, contributing to their erosion. Almost 2 centuries worth of naturalistic studies focused on a few true-boring (euendolithic) phototrophs, but substrate preference has received little attention. The Isla de Mona (Puerto Rico) intertidal zone offers a unique setting to investigate substrate specificity of endolithic communities since various phosphate rock, limestone and dolostone outcrops occur there. High-throughput 16S rDNA genetic sampling, enhanced by targeted cultivation, revealed that, while euendolithic cyanobacteria were dominant operational taxonomic units (OTUs), the communities were invariably of high diversity, well beyond that reported in traditional studies and implying an unexpected metabolic complexity potentially contributed by secondary colonizers. While the overall community composition did not show differences traceable to the nature of the mineral substrate, we detected specialization among particular euendolithic cyanobacterial clades towards the type of substrate they excavate but only at the OTU phylogenetic level, implying that close relatives have specialized recurrently into particular substrates. The cationic mineral component was determinant in this preference, suggesting the existence in nature of alternatives to the boring mechanism described in culture that is based exclusively on transcellular calcium transport.http://www.biogeosciences.net/14/311/2017/bg-14-311-2017.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author E. Couradeau
D. Roush
B. S. Guida
F. Garcia-Pichel
spellingShingle E. Couradeau
D. Roush
B. S. Guida
F. Garcia-Pichel
Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)
Biogeosciences
author_facet E. Couradeau
D. Roush
B. S. Guida
F. Garcia-Pichel
author_sort E. Couradeau
title Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)
title_short Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)
title_full Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)
title_fullStr Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)
title_full_unstemmed Diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (Isla de Mona, Puerto Rico)
title_sort diversity and mineral substrate preference in endolithic microbial communities from marine intertidal outcrops (isla de mona, puerto rico)
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Biogeosciences
issn 1726-4170
1726-4189
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Endolithic microbial communities are prominent features of intertidal marine habitats, where they colonize a variety of substrates, contributing to their erosion. Almost 2 centuries worth of naturalistic studies focused on a few true-boring (euendolithic) phototrophs, but substrate preference has received little attention. The Isla de Mona (Puerto Rico) intertidal zone offers a unique setting to investigate substrate specificity of endolithic communities since various phosphate rock, limestone and dolostone outcrops occur there. High-throughput 16S rDNA genetic sampling, enhanced by targeted cultivation, revealed that, while euendolithic cyanobacteria were dominant operational taxonomic units (OTUs), the communities were invariably of high diversity, well beyond that reported in traditional studies and implying an unexpected metabolic complexity potentially contributed by secondary colonizers. While the overall community composition did not show differences traceable to the nature of the mineral substrate, we detected specialization among particular euendolithic cyanobacterial clades towards the type of substrate they excavate but only at the OTU phylogenetic level, implying that close relatives have specialized recurrently into particular substrates. The cationic mineral component was determinant in this preference, suggesting the existence in nature of alternatives to the boring mechanism described in culture that is based exclusively on transcellular calcium transport.
url http://www.biogeosciences.net/14/311/2017/bg-14-311-2017.pdf
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