Department of Biology, University of Victoria, Victoria, BC, Canada.
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Mol Ecol. 2020 Jul;29(13):2477-2491. doi: 10.1111/mec.15494. Epub 2020 Jun 30.
Both coral-associated bacteria and endosymbiotic algae (Symbiodiniaceae spp.) are vitally important for the biological function of corals. Yet little is known about their co-occurrence within corals, how their diversity varies across coral species, or how they are impacted by anthropogenic disturbances. Here, we sampled coral colonies (n = 472) from seven species, encompassing a range of life history traits, across a gradient of chronic human disturbance (n = 11 sites on Kiritimati [Christmas] atoll) in the central equatorial Pacific, and quantified the sequence assemblages and community structure of their associated Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities. Although Symbiodiniaceae alpha diversity did not vary with chronic human disturbance, disturbance was consistently associated with higher bacterial Shannon diversity and richness, with bacterial richness by sample almost doubling from sites with low to very high disturbance. Chronic disturbance was also associated with altered microbial beta diversity for Symbiodiniaceae and bacteria, including changes in community structure for both and increased variation (dispersion) of the Symbiodiniaceae communities. We also found concordance between Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial community structure, when all corals were considered together, and individually for two massive species, Hydnophora microconos and Porites lobata, implying that symbionts and bacteria respond similarly to human disturbance in these species. Finally, we found that the dominant Symbiodiniaceae ancestral lineage in a coral colony was associated with differential abundances of several distinct bacterial taxa. These results suggest that increased beta diversity of Symbiodiniaceae and bacterial communities may be a reliable indicator of stress in the coral microbiome, and that there may be concordant responses to chronic disturbance between these communities at the whole-ecosystem scale.
珊瑚共生细菌和内共生藻类(Symbiodiniaceae 属)对珊瑚的生物学功能至关重要。然而,人们对它们在珊瑚内的共现、多样性在珊瑚物种间的变化以及它们如何受到人为干扰的影响知之甚少。在这里,我们从七种珊瑚物种中采集了珊瑚标本(n=472),这些物种具有不同的生活史特征,分布在赤道太平洋中部的慢性人为干扰梯度上(n=11 个圣诞环礁的地点),并定量了它们相关的 Symbiodiniaceae 和细菌群落的序列组合和群落结构。尽管 Symbiodiniaceae 的 alpha 多样性不受慢性人为干扰的影响,但干扰始终与更高的细菌 Shannon 多样性和丰富度相关联,受干扰的样本中的细菌丰富度几乎是低干扰和高干扰样本的两倍。慢性干扰还与 Symbiodiniaceae 和细菌微生物 beta 多样性的改变有关,包括对两者的群落结构的改变,以及 Symbiodiniaceae 群落的变异(离散)增加。当我们综合考虑所有珊瑚,以及单独考虑两种大型珊瑚,即 Hydnophora microconos 和 Porites lobata 时,我们发现 Symbiodiniaceae 和细菌群落结构之间存在一致性,这表明共生体和细菌对这些物种的人为干扰有类似的反应。最后,我们发现珊瑚群中占主导地位的 Symbiodiniaceae 祖系与几个不同细菌类群的丰度差异有关。这些结果表明,Symbiodiniaceae 和细菌群落的 beta 多样性增加可能是珊瑚微生物组应激的可靠指标,并且在整个生态系统尺度上,这些群落之间可能存在对慢性干扰的一致反应。