Microbial communities of the antFormica exsectaand its nest material

Author:

Lindström Stafva12,Timonen Sari S.2,Sundström Liselotte13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, Research programme in Organismal and Evolutionary Biology University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

2. Faculty of Agricultural Sciences, Department of Microbiology University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

3. Tvärminne zoological station University of Helsinki Helsinki Finland

Abstract

AbstractIn this study, we investigated the bacterial and fungal microbiomes of the antFormica exsecta(Hymenoptera, Formicidae), and assessed whether the microbial communities inside the ants differ from those in their nest material. Furthermore, we investigated whether the microbial communities inside the ants are conserved across time. To achieve this, we sequenced the bacterial 16S rRNA, and the fungal ITS region in entire adult worker ants and their nest material by Illumina MiSeq. We found that both the bacterial, and the fungal microbiomes form communities discrete from those in the surrounding nest material. In addition to the differences in species composition, we also found that bacterial species diversity, species richness, ζ diversity, and evenness were lower in ants than in the nest material. For fungi, only species richness was lower in the ants than in the nest material. The rate of within‐colony species turnover across sampling events was not statistically significant for bacteria, but highly significant for fungi. This suggests that the fungal communities in the ants are less stable than the bacterial ones. Four bacterial taxa (Alphaproteobacteria,Proteobacteria,Staphylococcus, andStreptococcus), and two fungal taxa (DavidiellaandCryptococcus) formed a core microbiome, being consistently present and more abundant in the ants, but absent in the nest material. In all other cases differences in community composition and structure were due to taxa that were more consistently present and more abundant in the nest material, and frequently absent in the ants. Furthermore, we found 36 unique OTUs identified as Proteobacteria, and 82 unique OTUs identified as Alphaproteobacteria in the ants, representing 2.5% and 5.8% of all bacterial OTUs and 24.6% and 41% of the total number of bacterial sequences. This suggests thatF. exsectaharbours a considerable bacterial diversity that so far remains unexplored.

Funder

Academy of Finland

Helsingin Yliopisto

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Soil Science

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