4.8 Article

An all-taxon microbial inventory of the Moorea coral reef ecosystem

期刊

ISME JOURNAL
卷 6, 期 2, 页码 309-319

出版社

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2011.108

关键词

coral reef; MIRADA-LTERS; pyrosequencing; V6; V9

资金

  1. United States National Science Foundation (NSF) MIRADA LTERS [DEB-0717390]
  2. NSF [OCE-0417412, OCE-0927411]
  3. Directorate For Geosciences [1026851] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  4. Division Of Ocean Sciences [1026851] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Division Of Ocean Sciences
  6. Directorate For Geosciences [0927411] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The Moorea Coral Reef Long Term Ecological Research (LTER) Site (17.50 degrees S, 149.83 degrees W) comprises the fringe of coral reefs and lagoons surrounding the volcanic island of Moorea in the Society Islands of French Polynesia. As part of our Microbial Inventory Research Across Diverse Aquatic LTERS biodiversity inventory project, we characterized microbial community composition across all three domains of life using amplicon pyrosequencing of the V6 (bacterial and archaeal) and V9 (eukaryotic) hypervariable regions of small-subunit ribosomal RNA genes. Our survey spanned eight locations along a 130-km transect from the reef lagoon to the open ocean to examine changes in communities along inshore to offshore gradients. Our results illustrate consistent community differentiation between inshore and offshore ecosystems across all three domains, with greater richness in all domains in the reef-associated habitats. Bacterial communities were more homogenous among open ocean sites spanning >100km than among inshore sites separated by <1 km, whereas eukaryotic communities varied more offshore than inshore, and archaea showed more equal levels of dissimilarity among subhabitats. We identified signature communities representative of specific geographic and geochemical milieu, and characterized co-occurrence patterns of specific microbial taxa within the inshore ecosystem including several bacterial groups that persist in geographical niches across time. Bacterial and archaeal communities were dominated by few abundant taxa but spatial patterning was consistent through time and space in both rare and abundant communities. This is the first in-depth inventory analysis of biogeographic variation of all three microbial domains within a coral reef ecosystem. The ISME Journal (2012) 6, 309-319; doi: 10.1038/ismej.2011.108; published online 8 September 2011

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