4.6 Article

Quantifying the Importance of Abiotic and Biotic Factors Governing the Succession of Gut Microbiota Over Shrimp Ontogeny

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.752750

Keywords

shrimp gut microbiota; bacterioplankton community; temporal succession; SourceTracker; ecological processes; rare and abundant sub-communities

Categories

Funding

  1. Natural Science Fund for Distinguished Young Scholars of Zhejiang Province [LR19C030001]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31872693, 32071549]
  3. Key Public Welfare Technology Application Research Project of Ningbo [202002N3032]
  4. K.C. Wong Magna Fund in Ningbo University

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The study found that shrimp gut microbiota succession is significantly influenced by shrimp age and water pH, while rearing water bacteria communities are mainly influenced by salinity, pH, total phosphorus, and dissolved oxygen. Gut commensals primarily originate from the younger host rather than surrounding bacterioplankton.
Intensive studies have evaluated abiotic factors in shaping host gut microbiota. In contrast, little is known on how and to what extent abiotic (geochemical variables) and biotic (i.e., surrounding microbes, younger shrimp, and age) factors assemble the gut microbiota over shrimp ontogeny. Considering the functional importance of gut microbiota in improving host fitness, this knowledge is fundamental to sustain a desirable gut microbiota for a healthy aquaculture. Here, we characterized the successional rules of both the shrimp gut and rearing water bacterial communities over the entire shrimp farming. Both the gut and rearing water bacterial communities exhibited the time decay of similarity relationship, with significantly lower temporal turnover rate for the gut microbiota, which were primarily governed by shrimp age (days postlarval inoculation) and water pH. Gut commensals were primary sourced (averaged 60.3%) from their younger host, rather than surrounding bacterioplankton (19.1%). A structural equation model revealed that water salinity, pH, total phosphorus, and dissolve oxygen directly governed bacterioplankton communities but not for the gut microbiota. In addition, shrimp gut microbiota did not simply mirror the rearing bacterioplankton communities. The gut microbiota tended to be governed by variable selection over shrimp ontogeny, while the rearing bacterioplankton community was shaped by homogeneous selection. However, the determinism of rare and stochasticity of abundant subcommunities were consistent between shrimp gut and rearing water. These findings highlight the importance of independently interpreting host-associated and free-living communities, as well as their rare and abundant subcommunities for a comprehensive understanding of the ecological processes that govern microbial successions.

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