Klaus James S, Janse Ingmar, Heikoop Jeffrey M, Sanford Robert A, Fouke Bruce W
Department of Geology, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801, USA.
Environ Microbiol. 2007 May;9(5):1291-305. doi: 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2007.01249.x.
The high incidence of coral disease in shallow coastal marine environments suggests seawater depth and coastal pollution have an impact on the microbial communities inhabiting healthy coral tissues. A study was undertaken to determine how bacterial communities inhabiting tissues of the coral Montastraea annularis change at 5 m, 10 m and 20 m water depth in varying proximity to the urban centre and seaport of Willemstad, Curaçao, Netherlands Antilles. Analyses of terminal restriction fragment length polymorphisms (TRFLP) of 16S rRNA gene sequences show significant differences in bacterial communities of polluted and control localities only at the shallowest seawater depth. Furthermore, distinct differences in bacterial communities were found with increasing water depth. Comparisons of TRFLP peaks with sequenced clone libraries indicate the black band disease cyanobacterium clone CD1C11 is common and most abundant on healthy corals in less than 10 m water depth. Similarly, sequences belonging to a previously unrecognized group of likely phototrophic bacteria, herein referred to as CAB-I, were also more common in shallow water. To assess the influence of environmental and physiologic factors on bacterial community structure, canonical correspondence analysis was performed using explanatory variables associated with: (i) light availability; (ii) seawater pollution; (iii) coral mucus composition; (iv) the community structure of symbiotic algae; and (v) the photosynthetic activity of symbiotic algae. Eleven per cent of the variation in bacterial communities was accounted for by covariation with these variables; the most important being photosynthetically active radiation (sunlight) and the coral uptake of sewage-derived compounds as recorded by the delta(15)N of coral tissue.
浅海沿海水域珊瑚疾病的高发病率表明,海水深度和沿海污染对栖息在健康珊瑚组织中的微生物群落有影响。开展了一项研究,以确定在荷属安的列斯群岛库拉索岛威廉斯塔德市中心和海港不同距离处,水深5米、10米和20米时,栖息在环纹刺星珊瑚组织中的细菌群落如何变化。对16S rRNA基因序列的末端限制性片段长度多态性(TRFLP)分析表明,仅在最浅海水深度处,污染地区和对照地区的细菌群落存在显著差异。此外,随着水深增加,细菌群落也存在明显差异。将TRFLP峰与已测序的克隆文库进行比较表明,黑带病蓝藻克隆CD1C11在水深小于10米的健康珊瑚上常见且最为丰富。同样,属于一个以前未被识别的可能的光养细菌组(本文称为CAB-I)的序列在浅水中也更常见。为了评估环境和生理因素对细菌群落结构的影响,使用与以下因素相关的解释变量进行了典范对应分析:(i)光照可用性;(ii)海水污染;(iii)珊瑚黏液组成;(iv)共生藻的群落结构;(v)共生藻的光合活性。这些变量的协变量解释了细菌群落11%的变异;其中最重要的是光合有效辐射(阳光)以及珊瑚组织δ(15)N记录的珊瑚对污水衍生化合物的摄取。