Lim Jin Yan, Yeoh Yun Kit, Canepa Maximiliano, Knuckey Richard, Jerry Dean R, Bourne David G
College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia.
The Australian Research Council Industrial Transformation Research Hub (ARC ITRH) for Supercharging Tropical Aquaculture through Genetics Solutions, James Cook University, Townsville, QLD, 4811, Australia.
Anim Microbiome. 2024 Sep 17;6(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s42523-024-00339-y.
Fish health, growth and disease is intricately linked to its associated microbiome. Understanding the influence, source and ultimately managing the microbiome, particularly for vulnerable early life-stages, has been identified as one of the key requirements to improving farmed fish production. One tropical fish species of aquaculture importance farmed throughout the Asia-Pacific region is the giant grouper (Epinephelus lanceolatus). Variability in the health and survival of E. lanceolatus larvae is partially dependent on exposure to and development of its early microbiome. Here, we examined the development in the microbiome of commercially reared giant grouper larvae, its surrounding environment, and that from live food sources to understand the type of bacterial species larvae are exposed to, and where some of the sources of bacteria may originate. We show that species richness and microbial diversity of the larval microbiome significantly increased in the first 4 days after hatching, with the community composition continuing to shift over the initial 10 days in the hatchery facility. The dominant larval bacterial taxa appeared to be predominantly derived from live cultured microalgae and rotifer feeds and included Marixanthomonas, Candidatus Hepatincola, Meridianimaribacter and Vibrio. In contrast, a commercial probiotic added as part of the hatchery's operating procedure failed to establish in the larvae microbiome. Microbial source tracking indicated that feed was the largest influence on the composition of the giant grouper larvae microbiome (up to 55.9%), supporting attempts to modulate fish microbiomes in commercial hatcheries through improved diets. The marked abundances of Vibrio (up to 21.7% of 16S rRNA gene copies in larvae) highlights a need for rigorous quality control of feed material.
鱼类的健康、生长和疾病与它相关的微生物群落有着复杂的联系。了解微生物群落的影响、来源并最终对其进行管理,特别是对于脆弱的幼鱼阶段,已被确定为提高养殖鱼类产量的关键要求之一。在亚太地区广泛养殖的一种具有水产养殖重要性的热带鱼类是鞍带石斑鱼(Epinephelus lanceolatus)。鞍带石斑鱼幼鱼的健康和存活差异部分取决于其早期微生物群落的接触和发育情况。在此,我们研究了商业养殖的鞍带石斑鱼幼鱼、其周围环境以及活体食物来源的微生物群落发育情况,以了解幼鱼接触到的细菌种类类型以及部分细菌来源可能来自何处。我们发现,幼鱼微生物群落在孵化后的头4天内物种丰富度和微生物多样性显著增加,在孵化场设施的最初10天内群落组成持续变化。幼鱼的主要细菌类群似乎主要来自活体培养的微藻和轮虫饲料,包括黄斑单胞菌属、候选肝杆菌属、子午线海杆菌属和弧菌属。相比之下,作为孵化场操作程序一部分添加的商业益生菌未能在幼鱼微生物群落中定殖。微生物源追踪表明,饲料对鞍带石斑鱼幼鱼微生物群落组成的影响最大(高达55.9%),这支持了通过改善饲料来调节商业孵化场中鱼类微生物群落的尝试。弧菌的显著丰度(在幼鱼中占16S rRNA基因拷贝数高达21.7%)凸显了对饲料原料进行严格质量控制的必要性。