Reigel Alicia M, Easson Cole G, Fiore Cara L, Apprill Amy
Department of Biology, Appalachian State University, Boone, USA.
Biology Department, Washington and Lee University, Lexington, VA, 24450, USA.
Sci Rep. 2024 Dec 28;14(1):31394. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-82995-3.
Coral reef sponges efficiently take up particulate and dissolved organic matter (DOM) from the water column and release compounds such as nucleosides, amino acids, and other dissolved metabolites to the surrounding reef via their exhalent seawater, but the influence of this process on reef picoplankton and nutrient processing is relatively unexplored. Here we examined the impact of sponge exhalent on the reef picoplankon community and subsequent alterations to the reef dissolved metabolite pool. We exposed reef picoplankton communities to a sponge exhalent water mixture (Niphates digitalis and Xestospongia muta) or filtered reef seawater (control) in closed, container-based dark incubations. We used 16S rRNA gene sequencing and flow cytometry-based cell counts to examine the picoplankton community and metabolomics and other analyses to examine the dissolved metabolite pool. The initial sponge exhalent was enriched in adenosine, inosine, chorismate, humic-like and amino acid-like components, and ammonium. Following 48 h of exposure to sponge exhalent, the picoplankton differed in composition, were reduced in diversity, showed doubled (or higher) growth efficiencies, and harbored increased copiotrophic and denitrifying taxa (Marinomonas, Pontibacterium, Aliiroseovarius) compared to control, reef-water based incubations. Alongside these picoplankton alterations, the sponge treatments, relative to seawater controls, had decreased adenosine, inosine, tryptophan, and ammonium, metabolites that may support the observed higher picoplankton growth efficiencies. Sponge treatments also had a net increase in several monosaccharides and other metabolites including anthranilate, riboflavin, nitrite, and nitrate. Our work demonstrates a link between sponge exhalent-associated metabolites and the picoplankton community, with exhalent water supporting an increased abundance of efficient, copiotrophic taxa that catabolize complex nutrients. The copiotrophic taxa were often different from those observed in previous algae and coral studies. These results have implications for better understanding the multifaceted role of sponges on picoplankton biomass with subsequent potential impacts to coral and other planktonic feeders in oligotrophic reef environments.
珊瑚礁海绵能有效地从水柱中摄取颗粒状和溶解的有机物质(DOM),并通过其排出的海水向周围的珊瑚礁释放核苷、氨基酸和其他溶解代谢物等化合物,但这一过程对珊瑚礁微微型浮游生物和营养物质处理的影响相对未被探索。在这里,我们研究了海绵排出物对珊瑚礁微微型浮游生物群落的影响以及随后对珊瑚礁溶解代谢物库的改变。我们将珊瑚礁微微型浮游生物群落置于封闭的、基于容器的黑暗培养中,使其暴露于海绵排出物与水的混合物(指状拟爱神木海绵和多变异海绵)或经过过滤的珊瑚礁海水(对照)中。我们使用16S rRNA基因测序和基于流式细胞术的细胞计数来检测微微型浮游生物群落,并通过代谢组学和其他分析来检测溶解代谢物库。最初的海绵排出物富含腺苷、肌苷、分支酸、类腐殖质和类氨基酸成分以及铵。在暴露于海绵排出物48小时后,与基于对照珊瑚礁海水的培养相比,微微型浮游生物的组成不同,多样性降低,生长效率提高了一倍(或更高),并且含有更多的富营养型和反硝化类群(海单胞菌属、Pontibacterium、Aliiroseovarius)。除了这些微微型浮游生物的变化外,与海水对照相比,海绵处理组中的腺苷、肌苷、色氨酸和铵减少了,这些代谢物可能支持了观察到较高的微微型浮游生物生长效率。海绵处理组中几种单糖和其他代谢物(包括邻氨基苯甲酸、核黄素、亚硝酸盐和硝酸盐)也有净增加。我们的研究表明海绵排出物相关的代谢物与微微型浮游生物群落之间存在联系,排出的水支持了能分解复杂营养物质的高效富营养型类群数量的增加。富营养型类群通常与之前藻类和珊瑚研究中观察到的不同。这些结果对于更好地理解海绵在微微型浮游生物生物量方面的多方面作用以及随后对贫营养珊瑚礁环境中的珊瑚和其他浮游生物捕食者的潜在影响具有重要意义。