Regional and oyster microenvironmental scale heterogeneity in the Pacific oyster bacterial community

Author:

King William L12,Siboni Nachshon2,Kahlke Tim2,Dove Michael3,O'Connor Wayne3,Mahbub Khandaker Rayhan1,Jenkins Cheryl4,Seymour Justin R2,Labbate Maurizio1

Affiliation:

1. University of Technology Sydney, The School of Life Sciences, Ultimo, New South Wales, 2007, Australia

2. University of Technology Sydney, Climate Change Cluster, Ultimo, New South Wales, 2007, Australia

3. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Port Stephens Fisheries Institute, Port Stephens, New South Wales, 2316, Australia

4. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, Menangle, New South Wales, 2568, Australia

Abstract

ABSTRACT Different organs of a host represent distinct microenvironments resulting in the establishment of multiple discrete bacterial communities within a host. These discrete bacterial communities can also vary according to geographical location. For the Pacific oyster, Crassostrea gigas, the factors governing bacterial diversity and abundance of different oyster microenvironments are poorly understood. In this study, the factors shaping bacterial abundance, diversity and composition associated with the C. gigas mantle, gill, adductor muscle and digestive gland were characterised using 16S (V3-V4) rRNA amplicon sequencing across six discrete estuaries. Both location and tissue-type, with tissue-type being the stronger determinant, were factors driving bacterial community composition. Bacterial communities from wave-dominated estuaries had similar compositions and higher bacterial abundance despite being geographically distant from one another, possibly indicating that functional estuarine morphology characteristics are a factor shaping the oyster bacterial community. Despite the bacterial community heterogeneity, examinations of the core bacterial community identified Spirochaetaceae bacteria as conserved across all sites and samples. Whereas members of the Vulcaniibacterium, Spirochaetaceae and Margulisbacteria, and Polynucleobacter were regionally conserved members of the digestive gland, gill and mantle bacterial communities, respectively. This indicates that baseline bacterial community profiles for specific locations are necessary when investigating bacterial communities in oyster health.

Funder

Australian Research Council

NCBI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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