Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/28167
Title: Geographical location and habitat predict variation in prokaryotic community composition of Suberites diversicolor
Author: Ferreira, Marina Rafaela Santos
Cleary, Daniel Francis Richard
Coelho, Francisco José Riso Costa
Gomes, Newton Carlos Marcial
Huang, Yusheng M.
Polónia, Ana Rita Moura
de Voogd, Nicole Joy
Keywords: Anchialine systems
Composition
Illumina
Porifera
Indonesia
Taiwan
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: Springer Nature
Abstract: Purpose: Marine lakes are unique habitats that house diverse assemblages of benthic and planktonic organisms including endemic species. In this study, we aimed to assess to what extent geographical location (Berau versus Papua) and the degree of marine lake connectivity (relatively open versus closed) to the surrounding marine environment structures the prokaryotic community composition of the sponge species Suberites diversicolor. Methods: Sponge specimens were sampled in five marine lakes in Borneo and Papua and one open sea habitat in Taiwan. Result: Prokaryotic communities of S. diversicolor were dominated by members assigned to the Proteobacteria (particularly Alphaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria) and Cyanobacteria, which together made up from 78 to 87% of sequences in all samples. The dominant operational taxonomic units (OTUs) in most samples, OTUs 1 and 3, were both assigned to the alphaproteobacterial order Rhodospirillales with OTU-1 dominant in the marine lakes of Berau and Papua and OTU-3 in Taiwan. OTU-3 was also largely absent from Papuan samples but present in all Berau samples. Compositionally, S. diversicolor samples clustered according to geographical location with the main axis of variation separating marine lake samples collected in Berau from those collected in Papua and the second axis of variation separating open sea samples collected in Taiwan from all marine lake samples. In addition, our results suggest that the degree of lake connectivity to the open sea also influences prokaryotic composition. Conclusion: Although previous studies have shown that sponge-associated microbial communities tend to be stable across different geographical and environmental gradients, in the present study, both geography and local environmental conditions were significant predictors of variation in prokaryotic community composition of S. diversicolor.
Peer review: yes
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10773/28167
DOI: 10.1186/s13213-020-01546-z
ISSN: 1590-4261
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DBio - Artigos

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