Bacterial composition and inferring function profiles in the biofloc system rearing Litopenaeus vannamei postlarvae at a low salinity

Author:

Huang Hai-Hong1ORCID,Li Chao-Yun2,Lei Yan-Ju1,Kuang Wei-Qi1,Zou Wan-Sheng1,Yang Pin-Hong1

Affiliation:

1. College of Life and Environmental Sciences, Hunan University of Arts and Science, Changde Hunan, China

2. Shandong Vocational Animal Science and Veterinary College, Weifang Shandong, China

Abstract

This study investigated the bacterial composition and inferring function profiles in the biofloc system rearing Litopenaeus vannamei postlarvae (PL) at a low salinity condition. PL (~ stage 15) were stocked in four parallel tanks filled in water with a salinity of 5.0‰ at a density of 4000 individuals per m3 for a 28-days culture experiment, during which glucose was added as a carbon source with a C:N of 20:1. At the end of the experiment, water was sampled from each tank and pooled to extract microbial DNA for high-throughput sequencing of the V3-V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene. Results showed that the bacterial community at 28 d was dominated by phyla of Proteobacteria (45.8%), Bacteroidetes (21.1%), Planctomycetes (13.5%), Chlamydiae (10.3%), and Firmicutes (6.8%). A proportion of 81% inferring KEGG functions of this bacterial community is associated with metabolism. Among functions relating to nitrogen metabolism, 48.5% were involved in converting ammonia to glutamate. Still, the proportion of those engaged in transformation among ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate was 18.0%, inferring higher protein-synthesis but lower inorganic nitrogen-transformation capacities of the bacterial community. At the same time (28 d), high levels of total nitrogen (231.3±6.0 mg L-1) and biofloc (127.0±63.0 mL L-1) but low concentrations of ammonia (0.04±0.01 mg L-1), nitrite (0.2±0.1 mg L-1) and nitrate (12.9±2.5 mg L-1) were observed. The results supply a novel insight for understanding bacterial community function in the biofloc system nursing L. vannamei PL at low salinity.

Publisher

AquacultureHub

Subject

Agronomy and Crop Science,Aquatic Science

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