A comparison of prokaryote communities inhabiting sponges, bacterial mats, sediment and seawater in Southeast Asian coral reefs

Author:

Cleary DFR1ORCID,Polónia ARM1,Huang YM23,Putchakarn S4,Gomes NCM1,de Voogd NJ56

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology & CESAM, University of Aveiro, Campus de Santiago, 3810-193 Aveiro, Portugal

2. Tropical Island Sustainable Development Research Center, National Penghu University of Science and Technology, Penghu, Taiwan

3. Department of Marine Recreation, University of Science and Technology, Penghu, Taiwan

4. Institute of Marine Science, Burapha University, Chon Buri, 20131, Thailand

5. Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Leiden, The Netherlands

6. Institute of Environmental Sciences (CML), Leiden University, the Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract In the present study, we used Illumina sequencing to explore the prokaryote communities of 17 demosponge species and how they compare with bacterial mat, sediment and seawater samples (all sampled from coral reef habitat in Taiwan and Thailand). The studied sponge species formed three clusters. OTU richness and evenness were by far highest in the sediment and bacterial mat biotopes. There were pronounced differences in OTU richness and evenness among clusters and also considerable variation among certain host species within clusters. Additionally, the relative abundance of some prokaryotic taxa also differed among clusters with Poribacteria, for example, being recorded in all sponge species, but with very low relative abundances in species of two of the three clusters. This sponge-associated phylum was, however, recorded at relatively high mean abundance in bacterial mat samples, which also housed relatively high abundances of actinobacterial and Chloroflexi members. Our results support the HMA status of the species Aaptos lobata, Hyrtios erectus, Pseudoceratina purpurea and Xestospongia testudinaria, which clustered together and LMA status of the species Acanthella cavernosa, Echinodictyum asperum, Jaspis splendens, Ptilocaulis spiculifer, Stylissa carteri and Suberites diversicolor, which also clustered together. Other species (Agelas cavernosa, Agelas nemoechinata, Acanthostylotella cornuta, Paratetilla sp., Hymeniacidon sp. and Haliclona cymaeformis) deviated somewhat from the typical HMA/LMA dichotomy and formed a strongly supported cluster.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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