4.2 Article

Ontogeny drives shifts in skin bacterial communities in facultatively paedomorphic salamanders

Journal

MICROBIOLOGY-SGM
Volume 169, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MICROBIOLOGY SOC
DOI: 10.1099/mic.0.001399

Keywords

amphibians; chytrid; development; microbiome; paedomorphosis

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Skin-associated bacteria in amphibians can inhibit pathogen infection, but their composition changes across developmental stages. Metamorphosis is a major driver of host-associated microbes in amphibians. Infection does not disrupt the microbiome.
Microbiomes are major determinants of host growth, development and survival. In amphibians, host-associated bacteria in the skin can inhibit pathogen infection, but many processes can influence the structure and composition of the community. Here we quantified the shifts in skin-associated bacteria across developmental stages in the striped newt (Notophthalmus perstria-tus), a threatened salamander species with a complex life history and vulnerable to infection by the amphibian chytrid fungus Batrachochytrium dendrobatidis and ranavirus. Our analyses show that premetamorphic larval and paedomorphic stages share similar bacterial compositions, and that the changes in the microbiome coincided with physiological restructuring during metamorphosis. Newts undergoing metamorphosis exhibited microbiome compositions that were intermediate between paedomorphic and post-metamorphic stages, further supporting the idea that metamorphosis is a major driver of host-associated microbes in amphibians. We did not find support for infection-related disruption of the microbiome, though infection replicates were small for each respective life stage.

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