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- Title
Microbiome changes in Sinularia spp. soft corals relative to health status.
- Authors
Easson, Cole G.; Gochfeld, Deborah J.; Slattery, Marc
- Abstract
Coral reefs are globally important ecosystems with high species diversity at both the macro and micro scales. In recent years, coral reefs have been heavily impacted by anthropogenic and natural stressors, including emerging diseases. Many of these diseases have been identified in reef-building corals, but other invertebrate taxa, such as soft corals, are increasingly at risk. This study focuses on a hybrid species complex within soft corals of the genus Sinularia, which dominate the shallow reefs of Guam, and the broader Indo-Pacific. These soft corals exhibit varying levels of disease susceptibility to Sinularia tissue loss disease (STLD), a chronic wasting disease. In the current study, we used next-generation amplicon sequencing of prokaryotic and eukaryotic communities within these soft corals to characterize their microbiomes, and develop a better understanding of the etiology of STLD. There were differences in specific ASVs across the microbiomes of healthy colonies of Sinularia maxima, Sinularia polydactyla and their hybrid (S. maxima x S. polydactyla). There was also a decline in the relative abundance of putatively beneficial symbionts (Symbiodinaceae and Endozoicomonas) in STLD-affected soft corals, but no consistent shifts towards a specific microbial community associated with STLD. The soft coral microbiomes also contained a high relative abundance of ASVs typically associated with terrestrial runoff. Our results suggest that the STLD phenotype may be due to a combination of factors, including infection by a yet unknown etiologic agent, shifts in putatively beneficial symbionts, and anthropogenic impacts on this shallow nearshore reef.
- Subjects
GUAM; ALCYONACEA; CORALS; CHRONIC wasting disease; ANTHROPOGENIC effects on nature; CORAL reefs &; islands; DISEASE susceptibility
- Publication
Marine Biology, 2024, Vol 171, Issue 2, p1
- ISSN
0025-3162
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00227-023-04362-6