The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates

Abstract Freshwater macroinvertebrates play key ecological roles in riverine food webs, such as the transfer of nutrients to consumers and decomposition of organic matter. Although local habitat quality drives macroinvertebrate diversity and abundance, little is known about their microbiota. In most...

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Main Authors: Shawn A. Kroetsch, Karen A. Kidd, Wendy A. Monk, Joseph M. Culp, Zacchaeus G. Compson, Scott A. Pavey
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-12-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6993
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spelling doaj-650cbd195c52477bb1986ac00775b23f2021-06-04T07:10:38ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582020-12-011024140001401910.1002/ece3.6993The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebratesShawn A. Kroetsch0Karen A. Kidd1Wendy A. Monk2Joseph M. Culp3Zacchaeus G. Compson4Scott A. Pavey5Department of Biological Sciences University of New Brunswick Saint John New Brunswick CanadaDepartment of Biological Sciences University of New Brunswick Saint John New Brunswick CanadaEnvironment and Climate Change Canada @ Canadian Rivers Institute Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management University of New Brunswick Fredericton New Brunswick CanadaEnvironment and Climate Change Canada Department of Biology and Geography and Environmental Studies Wilfrid Laurier University Waterloo Ontario CanadaEnvironment and Climate Change Canada @ Canadian Rivers Institute University of New Brunswick Fredericton New Brunswick CanadaDepartment of Biological Sciences University of New Brunswick Saint John New Brunswick CanadaAbstract Freshwater macroinvertebrates play key ecological roles in riverine food webs, such as the transfer of nutrients to consumers and decomposition of organic matter. Although local habitat quality drives macroinvertebrate diversity and abundance, little is known about their microbiota. In most animals, the microbiota provides benefits, such as increasing the rate at which nutrients are metabolized, facilitating immune system development, and defending against pathogenic attack. Our objectives were to identify the bacteria within aquatic invertebrates and determine whether their composition varied with taxonomy, habitat, diet, and time of sample collection. In 2016 and 2017, we collected 264 aquatic invertebrates from the mainstem Saint John (Wolastoq) River in New Brunswick, Canada, representing 15 orders. We then amplified the V3‐V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene within each individual, which revealed nearly 20,000 bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs). The microbiota across all aquatic invertebrates were dominated by Proteobacteria (69.25% of the total sequence reads), but they differed significantly in beta diversity, both among host invertebrate taxa (genus‐, family‐, and order‐levels) and temporally. In contrast to previous work, we observed no microbiota differences among functional feeding groups or traditional feeding habits, and neither water velocity nor microhabitat type structured microbiota variability. Our findings suggest that host invertebrate taxonomy was the most important factor in modulating the composition of the microbiota, likely through a combination of vertical and horizontal bacterial transmission, and evolutionary processes. This is one of the most comprehensive studies of freshwater invertebrate microbiota to date, and it underscores the need for future studies of invertebrate microbiota evolution and linkages to environmental bacteria and physico‐chemical conditions.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6993bacterial diversityfreshwater aquatic invertebrateinvertebrate‐microbe interactionsmicrobial ecologymicrobiota
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shawn A. Kroetsch
Karen A. Kidd
Wendy A. Monk
Joseph M. Culp
Zacchaeus G. Compson
Scott A. Pavey
spellingShingle Shawn A. Kroetsch
Karen A. Kidd
Wendy A. Monk
Joseph M. Culp
Zacchaeus G. Compson
Scott A. Pavey
The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
Ecology and Evolution
bacterial diversity
freshwater aquatic invertebrate
invertebrate‐microbe interactions
microbial ecology
microbiota
author_facet Shawn A. Kroetsch
Karen A. Kidd
Wendy A. Monk
Joseph M. Culp
Zacchaeus G. Compson
Scott A. Pavey
author_sort Shawn A. Kroetsch
title The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
title_short The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
title_full The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
title_fullStr The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
title_full_unstemmed The effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
title_sort effects of taxonomy, diet, and ecology on the microbiota of riverine macroinvertebrates
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Abstract Freshwater macroinvertebrates play key ecological roles in riverine food webs, such as the transfer of nutrients to consumers and decomposition of organic matter. Although local habitat quality drives macroinvertebrate diversity and abundance, little is known about their microbiota. In most animals, the microbiota provides benefits, such as increasing the rate at which nutrients are metabolized, facilitating immune system development, and defending against pathogenic attack. Our objectives were to identify the bacteria within aquatic invertebrates and determine whether their composition varied with taxonomy, habitat, diet, and time of sample collection. In 2016 and 2017, we collected 264 aquatic invertebrates from the mainstem Saint John (Wolastoq) River in New Brunswick, Canada, representing 15 orders. We then amplified the V3‐V4 hypervariable region of the 16S rRNA gene within each individual, which revealed nearly 20,000 bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs). The microbiota across all aquatic invertebrates were dominated by Proteobacteria (69.25% of the total sequence reads), but they differed significantly in beta diversity, both among host invertebrate taxa (genus‐, family‐, and order‐levels) and temporally. In contrast to previous work, we observed no microbiota differences among functional feeding groups or traditional feeding habits, and neither water velocity nor microhabitat type structured microbiota variability. Our findings suggest that host invertebrate taxonomy was the most important factor in modulating the composition of the microbiota, likely through a combination of vertical and horizontal bacterial transmission, and evolutionary processes. This is one of the most comprehensive studies of freshwater invertebrate microbiota to date, and it underscores the need for future studies of invertebrate microbiota evolution and linkages to environmental bacteria and physico‐chemical conditions.
topic bacterial diversity
freshwater aquatic invertebrate
invertebrate‐microbe interactions
microbial ecology
microbiota
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6993
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