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| Indexado |
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| DOI | 10.1111/MAEC.12729 | ||||
| Año | 2022 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
Identifying the core microbiome structure of a metaorganism can be used to monitor the impact of a perturbation against it and the changes in its stability (i.e., dysbiosis), resistance, and resilience. The core-microbiome interaction regulates holobiont health and homeostasis and is an indicator of the resilience of the whole community. This study determined the exclusive and shared core microbiome taxa of two reef-building coral species (Pocillopora damicornis and P. verrucosa), as well as the surrounding seawater and sediment, in six coral communities along the Northeastern tropical Pacific region. We also analysed the putative metabolic functions of the most abundant OTUs of these core microbiomes and evaluated the influence of anthropogenic stressors (i.e., tourism, fishery, eutrophication, among others) on core microbiome composition. Bacterial diversity was assessed by sequencing the V4 region of the 16S rRNA. The bacterial families Planctomycetaceae, Oceanospirillaceae, and Moraxellaceae presented the highest relative abundances in corals samples, while Flavobacteriaceae and Rhodobacteraceae dominated in seawater samples. In the sediment samples, Pseudoalteromonadaceae, Oxalobacteraceae, Moraxellaceae, and Pseudonocardiaceae had the highest representation. The core microbiomes of the two coral species, seawater, and sediment, shared 571 OTUs. The P. damicornis core microbiome varied between sites with low and moderately-high anthropogenic stressors. The core microbiomes of both coral species showed an increase in the relative abundance of the families Planctomycetaceae and Pseudomonadaceae in the sites with moderate-high anthropogenic stressors, associated with higher values of ammonium, chlorophyll a, and extinction coefficient. In contrast, the core microbiome of P. verrucosa, seawater, and sediments did not vary between sites with different anthropogenic stress conditions. Aerobic chemoheterotrophy was the metabolic function with the highest occurrence in all substrates' core microbiomes, followed by ureolysis and photoautotrophy.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ostria-Hernández, Martha L. | - |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| 2 | Hernandez-Zulueta, Joicye | - |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| 3 | Vargas-Ponce, Ofelia | Mujer |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| 4 | Diaz-Perez, Leopoldo | Hombre |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| 5 | ARAYA-VALENCIA, RUBEN | Hombre |
Universidad de Antofagasta - Chile
|
| 6 | RODRIGUEZ-TRONCOSO, ALMA PAOLA | Mujer |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| 7 | Rios-Jara, Eduardo | Hombre |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| 8 | Rodriguez-Zaragoza, Fabian Alejandro | Hombre |
Universidad de Guadalajara - México
Univ Guadalajara - México |
| Fuente |
|---|
| PRODEP |
| Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología |
| INNOVA CORFO |
| Universidad de Antofagasta |
| Universidad de Guadalajara |
| Secretaría de Educación Pública |
| FARZ |
| Islas Marietas National Parks |
| Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente, para el Tipo Superior |
| Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente (PRODEP) de la Secretaria de Educacion Publica, Mexico |
| Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente, para el Tipo Superior (PRODEP) del cuerpo academico "Ecologia y Biodiversidad", Universidad de Guadalajara |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| This work was supported by the Universidad de Guadalajara [P3E2010‐2015, PROSNI‐2012‐14, CONACYT 257987 (CB2015)], Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente (PRODEP) de la Secretaria de Educación Pública, México (103.5/08/2919 and 103.5/10/927) to FARZ; P3E2012 and PROSNI‐2012 to OVP; Innova CORFO (13IDL2‐18530 to RA). The authors are grateful to Dr A.L. Cupul‐Magaña (Universidad de Guadalajara) for help in the fieldwork and for providing benthic databases, as well as the authorities from Isla Isabel and Islas Marietas National Parks (J.A. Castrejón‐Pineda, G. Pérez‐Lozano and C. Robles‐Carrillo). We also thank A. Echevarría (Universidad de Antofagasta) for his assistance in processing the MiSeq Illumina sequencing data. Special thanks to Dr B. Díaz‐Cárdenas for her assistance in Venn Diagrams and MSc. F. Ramos‐Gallegos (Universidad de Guadalajara) for his invaluable help. Finally, MLOH acknowledges the postdoctoral fellowship from Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente, para el Tipo Superior (PRODEP) del cuerpo académico “Ecología y Biodiversidad” (UDG‐CA‐888), Universidad de Guadalajara. MLOH's postdoctoral fellowship was led by FARZ. |
| This study was funded by the Universidad de Guadalajara [P3E2010‐2015 and PROSNI‐2012‐14 to FARZ; P3E2012 and PROSNI‐2012 to OVP], Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente de la Secretaria de Educación Pública, México (103.5/08/2919 and 103.5/10/927 to FARZ), and Innova CORFO (13IDL2‐18530 to RA). |
| This work was supported by the Universidad de Guadalajara [P3E2010‐2015, PROSNI‐2012‐14, CONACYT 257987 (CB2015)], Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente (PRODEP) de la Secretaria de Educación Pública, México (103.5/08/2919 and 103.5/10/927) to FARZ; P3E2012 and PROSNI‐2012 to OVP; Innova CORFO (13IDL2‐18530 to RA). The authors are grateful to Dr A.L. Cupul‐Magaña (Universidad de Guadalajara) for help in the fieldwork and for providing benthic databases, as well as the authorities from Isla Isabel and Islas Marietas National Parks (J.A. Castrejón‐Pineda, G. Pérez‐Lozano and C. Robles‐Carrillo). We also thank A. Echevarría (Universidad de Antofagasta) for his assistance in processing the MiSeq Illumina sequencing data. Special thanks to Dr B. Díaz‐Cárdenas for her assistance in Venn Diagrams and MSc. F. Ramos‐Gallegos (Universidad de Guadalajara) for his invaluable help. Finally, MLOH acknowledges the postdoctoral fellowship from Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente, para el Tipo Superior (PRODEP) del cuerpo académico “Ecología y Biodiversidad” (UDG‐CA‐888), Universidad de Guadalajara. MLOH's postdoctoral fellowship was led by FARZ. |
| This work was supported by the Universidad de Guadalajara [P3E2010-2015, PROSNI-2012-14, CONACYT 257987 (CB2015)], Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente (PRODEP) de la Secretaria de Educacion Publica, Mexico (103.5/08/2919 and 103.5/10/927) to FARZ; P3E2012 and PROSNI-2012 to OVP; Innova CORFO (13IDL2-18530 to RA). The authors are grateful to Dr A.L. Cupul-Magana (Universidad de Guadalajara) for help in the fieldwork and for providing benthic databases, as well as the authorities from Isla Isabel and Islas Marietas National Parks (J.A. Castrejon-Pineda, G. Perez-Lozano and C. Robles-Carrillo). We also thank A. Echevarria (Universidad de Antofagasta) for his assistance in processing the MiSeq Illumina sequencing data. Special thanks to Dr B. Diaz-Cardenas for her assistance in Venn Diagrams and MSc. F. Ramos-Gallegos (Universidad de Guadalajara) for his invaluable help. Finally, MLOH acknowledges the postdoctoral fellowship from Programa para el Desarrollo Profesional Docente, para el Tipo Superior (PRODEP) del cuerpo academico "Ecologia y Biodiversidad" (UDG-CA-888), Universidad de Guadalajara. MLOH's postdoctoral fellowship was led by FARZ. |