Characterizing the Gut Microbial Communities of Native and Invasive Freshwater Bivalves after Long-Term Sample Preservation

Author:

Vaughn Stephanie N.1,Atkinson Carla L.2,Johnson Paul D.3ORCID,Jackson Colin R.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Mississippi, University, MS 38677, USA

2. Department of Biological Sciences, University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa, AL 35487, USA

3. Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, Alabama Aquatic Biodiversity Center, Marion, AL 36756, USA

Abstract

Freshwater mussels are important indicators of the overall health of their environment but have suffered declines that have been attributed to factors such as habitat degradation, a loss of fish hosts, climate change, and excessive nutrient inputs. The loss of mussel biodiversity can negatively impact freshwater ecosystems such that understanding the mussel’s gut microbiome has been identified as a priority topic for developing conservation strategies. In this study, we determine whether ethanol-stored specimens of freshwater mussels can yield representative information about their gut microbiomes such that changes in the microbiome through time could potentially be determined from museum mussel collections. A short-term preservation experiment using the invasive clam Corbicula fluminea was used to validate the use of ethanol as a method for storing the bivalve microbiome, and the gut microbiomes of nine native mussel species that had been preserved in ethanol for between 2 and 9 years were assessed. We show that ethanol preservation is a valid storage method for bivalve specimens in terms of maintaining an effective sequencing depth and the richness of their gut bacterial assemblages and provide further insight into the gut microbiomes of the invasive clam C. fluminea and nine species of native mussels. From this, we identify a “core” genus of bacteria (Romboutsia) that is potentially common to all freshwater bivalve species studied. These findings support the potential use of ethanol-preserved museum specimens to examine patterns in the gut microbiomes of freshwater mussels over long periods.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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