Grupstra Carsten G B, Rabbitt Kristen M, Howe-Kerr Lauren I, Correa Adrienne M S
BioSciences at Rice, Rice University, 6100 Main St, MS-140, Houston, TX, 77005, USA.
Anim Microbiome. 2021 Mar 22;3(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s42523-021-00086-4.
The microbiomes of foundation (habitat-forming) species such as corals and sponges underpin the biodiversity, productivity, and stability of ecosystems. Consumers shape communities of foundation species through trophic interactions, but the role of consumers in dispersing the microbiomes of such species is rarely examined. For example, stony corals rely on a nutritional symbiosis with single-celled endosymbiotic dinoflagellates (family Symbiodiniaceae) to construct reefs. Most corals acquire Symbiodiniaceae from the environment, but the processes that make Symbiodiniaceae available for uptake are not resolved. Here, we provide the first comprehensive, reef-scale demonstration that predation by diverse coral-eating (corallivorous) fish species promotes the dispersal of Symbiodiniaceae, based on symbiont cell densities and community compositions from the feces of four obligate corallivores, three facultative corallivores, two grazer/detritivores as well as samples of reef sediment and water.
Obligate corallivore feces are environmental hotspots of Symbiodiniaceae cells: live symbiont cell concentrations in such feces are 5-7 orders of magnitude higher than sediment and water environmental reservoirs. Symbiodiniaceae community compositions in the feces of obligate corallivores are similar to those in two locally abundant coral genera (Pocillopora and Porites), but differ from Symbiodiniaceae communities in the feces of facultative corallivores and grazer/detritivores as well as sediment and water. Combining our data on live Symbiodiniaceae cell densities in feces with in situ observations of fish, we estimate that some obligate corallivorous fish species release over 100 million Symbiodiniaceae cells per 100 m of reef per day. Released corallivore feces came in direct contact with coral colonies in the fore reef zone following 91% of observed egestion events, providing a potential mechanism for the transfer of live Symbiodiniaceae cells among coral colonies.
Taken together, our findings show that fish predation on corals may support the maintenance of coral cover on reefs in an unexpected way: through the dispersal of beneficial coral symbionts in corallivore feces. Few studies examine the processes that make symbionts available to foundation species, or how environmental reservoirs of such symbionts are replenished. This work sets the stage for parallel studies of consumer-mediated microbiome dispersal and assembly in other sessile, habitat-forming species.
珊瑚和海绵等基础(形成栖息地)物种的微生物群是生态系统生物多样性、生产力和稳定性的基础。消费者通过营养相互作用塑造基础物种群落,但消费者在传播此类物种微生物群方面的作用很少被研究。例如,石珊瑚依靠与单细胞内共生甲藻(共生藻科)的营养共生关系来构建珊瑚礁。大多数珊瑚从环境中获取共生藻科,但使共生藻科可供摄取的过程尚未明确。在此,我们首次提供了全面的、在珊瑚礁尺度上的证据,基于四种专性食珊瑚鱼类、三种兼性食珊瑚鱼类、两种食草/食碎屑动物的粪便以及珊瑚礁沉积物和水样中的共生体细胞密度和群落组成,证明多种食珊瑚鱼类的捕食促进了共生藻科的传播。
专性食珊瑚动物的粪便为共生藻科细胞的环境热点:此类粪便中活共生体细胞浓度比沉积物和水环境储库中的高5 - 7个数量级。专性食珊瑚动物粪便中的共生藻科群落组成与两种当地丰富的珊瑚属(鹿角珊瑚属和滨珊瑚属)中的相似,但与兼性食珊瑚动物、食草/食碎屑动物粪便以及沉积物和水中的共生藻科群落不同。将我们关于粪便中活共生藻科细胞密度的数据与对鱼类的原位观察相结合,我们估计一些专性食珊瑚鱼类物种每天每100米珊瑚礁释放超过1亿个共生藻科细胞。在91%的观察到的排粪事件后,排出的食珊瑚动物粪便与前礁区的珊瑚群体直接接触,为活共生藻科细胞在珊瑚群体之间的转移提供了一种潜在机制。
综上所述,我们的研究结果表明,鱼类对珊瑚的捕食可能以一种意想不到的方式支持珊瑚礁上珊瑚覆盖的维持:通过在食珊瑚动物粪便中传播有益的珊瑚共生体。很少有研究探讨使共生体可供基础物种利用的过程,或者此类共生体的环境储库如何得到补充。这项工作为在其他固着的、形成栖息地的物种中开展消费者介导的微生物群传播和组装的平行研究奠定了基础。