The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores

Rocky shore microbial diversity presents an excellent system to test for microbial habitat specificity or generality, enabling us to decipher how common macrobiota shape microbial community structure. At two coastal locations in the northeast Pacific Ocean, we show that microbial composition was sig...

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Main Authors: Catherine A. Pfister, Jack A. Gilbert, Sean M. Gibbons
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2014-10-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
16S
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/631.pdf
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spelling doaj-e50543cf8cd649b7a8659f201cb25e1f2020-11-24T20:40:22ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592014-10-012e63110.7717/peerj.631631The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shoresCatherine A. Pfister0Jack A. Gilbert1Sean M. Gibbons2Department of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USADepartment of Ecology and Evolution, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USAInstitute of Genomic and Systems Biology, Argonne National Laboratory, Lemont, IL, USARocky shore microbial diversity presents an excellent system to test for microbial habitat specificity or generality, enabling us to decipher how common macrobiota shape microbial community structure. At two coastal locations in the northeast Pacific Ocean, we show that microbial composition was significantly different between inert surfaces, the biogenic surfaces that included rocky shore animals and an alga, and the water column plankton. While all sampled entities had a core of common OTUs, rare OTUs drove differences among biotic and abiotic substrates. For the mussel Mytilus californianus, the shell surface harbored greater alpha diversity compared to internal tissues of the gill and siphon. Strikingly, a 7-year experimental removal of this mussel from tidepools did not significantly alter the microbial community structure of microbes associated with inert surfaces when compared with unmanipulated tidepools. However, bacterial taxa associated with nitrate reduction had greater relative abundance with mussels present, suggesting an impact of increased animal-derived nitrogen on a subset of microbial metabolism. Because the presence of mussels did not affect the structure and diversity of the microbial community on adjacent inert substrates, microbes in this rocky shore environment may be predominantly affected through direct physical association with macrobiota.https://peerj.com/articles/631.pdf16SRocky intertidal Mytilus californianus Nitrogen cyclingTatoosh IslandNitrification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Catherine A. Pfister
Jack A. Gilbert
Sean M. Gibbons
spellingShingle Catherine A. Pfister
Jack A. Gilbert
Sean M. Gibbons
The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
PeerJ
16S
Rocky intertidal
Mytilus californianus
Nitrogen cycling
Tatoosh Island
Nitrification
author_facet Catherine A. Pfister
Jack A. Gilbert
Sean M. Gibbons
author_sort Catherine A. Pfister
title The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
title_short The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
title_full The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
title_fullStr The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
title_full_unstemmed The role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
title_sort role of macrobiota in structuring microbial communities along rocky shores
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Rocky shore microbial diversity presents an excellent system to test for microbial habitat specificity or generality, enabling us to decipher how common macrobiota shape microbial community structure. At two coastal locations in the northeast Pacific Ocean, we show that microbial composition was significantly different between inert surfaces, the biogenic surfaces that included rocky shore animals and an alga, and the water column plankton. While all sampled entities had a core of common OTUs, rare OTUs drove differences among biotic and abiotic substrates. For the mussel Mytilus californianus, the shell surface harbored greater alpha diversity compared to internal tissues of the gill and siphon. Strikingly, a 7-year experimental removal of this mussel from tidepools did not significantly alter the microbial community structure of microbes associated with inert surfaces when compared with unmanipulated tidepools. However, bacterial taxa associated with nitrate reduction had greater relative abundance with mussels present, suggesting an impact of increased animal-derived nitrogen on a subset of microbial metabolism. Because the presence of mussels did not affect the structure and diversity of the microbial community on adjacent inert substrates, microbes in this rocky shore environment may be predominantly affected through direct physical association with macrobiota.
topic 16S
Rocky intertidal
Mytilus californianus
Nitrogen cycling
Tatoosh Island
Nitrification
url https://peerj.com/articles/631.pdf
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