The fungus Aphanoascella galapagosensis affects bacterial diversity of Galapagos giant tortoise carapaces

Author:

Perea Brugal Miguel1ORCID,Burbano Moscoso Manuela1ORCID,Nieto-Claudín Ainoa23ORCID,Deem Sharon L23ORCID,Siddons David C1ORCID,Caroca Cáceres Rodrigo1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Universidad del Azuay, Laboratorio de Biotecnología , Av. 24 de Mayo 7-77, Cuenca, 010204 Azuay , Ecuador

2. Charles Darwin Foundation, Charles Darwin Avenue , Santa Cruz 200350, Galapagos Islands , Ecuador

3. Saint Louis Zoo Institute for Conservation Medicine , One Government Drive, Saint Louis, MO 63110 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Aims This study aimed to describe the bacterial microbiome associated with the carapace of three species of Galapagos giant tortoises (Chelonoidis porteri, Chelonoidis donfaustoi, and Chelonoidis vandenburghi) and determine the potential effect of the whitish lesions caused by the fungus Aphanoascella galapagosensis. Methods and results We used Oxford Nanopore’s MinION to evaluate the external bacterial microbiome associated with the carapaces from the aforementioned species. Taxonomic assignment was carried out by Bugseq and the bacterial communities were compared between carapaces with and without lesions using a NMDS with Bray–Curtis as the dissimilarity index. We found four genera of bacteria that were ubiquitous throughout all individuals, suggesting the presence of shared taxa. The results also displayed a significant difference in the microbiome between carapaces with and without lesions, and for species-carapace interaction, but not among species. Conclusions This study establishes a baseline of the bacterial diversity of the carapace within three Galapagos giant tortoise species, showcasing the presence of a distinctive microbial community. Furthermore, our findings suggest a significant influence of the fungus Aphanoascella galapagosensis on the bacterial populations inhabiting the carapace of these reptiles.

Funder

University of Azuay

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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