4.7 Article

Evidence for strong environmental control on bacterial microbiomes of Antarctic springtails

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-82379-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Italian National Antarctic Program (PNRA) [PNRA16-00234]
  2. NERC

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Collembola in Antarctica play a key role in soil biota globally, and their microbiomes can contribute to important metabolic functions. The diversity and richness of springtail microbiomes in Antarctica are lower compared to temperate regions, and the microbiome composition is predominantly species-specific with limited core microbiome shared across different species. Geographic origin is the prevalent driver in shaping the microbiomes of Antarctic springtails, with closer similarity between individuals from the same bioregion rather than those belonging to the same genus.
Collembola are a key component of the soil biota globally, playing an important role in community and ecosystem dynamics. Equally significant are their associated microbiomes, that can contribute to key metabolic functions. In the present study, we investigated the bacterial community composition of four Antarctic springtail species to assess if and how the extreme Antarctic environment has shaped the collembolans' microbiomes. Springtails were collected from two biogeographical regions, the maritime and the continental Antarctic. From each region, two endemic species, belonging to the genera Cryptopygus (Isotomidae, Entomobryomorpha) and Friesea (Neanuridae, Poduromorpha), were included. This experimental design allowed us to quantify the relative importance of ecological factors (different regions of occurrence) and/or phylogenetic divergence in the host (different Orders) in shaping the Collembola microbiome. The diversity and richness of springtail microbiomes was lower in the Antarctic taxa compared to published information from species from temperate regions. The microbiome composition was predominantly species-specific, with a limited core microbiome shared across the four species examined. While both geographic origin and host species influenced the associated microbiomes, the former was the prevalent driver, with closer similarity between springtails from the same bioregion than between those belonging to the same genus.

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