4.7 Article

Impacts of the Marine Hatchery Built Environment, Water and Feed on Across Ontogeny in Yellowtail Kingfish, Seriola lalandi

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FRONTIERS IN MARINE SCIENCE
卷 8, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmars.2021.676731

关键词

microbiome; built environment; yellowtail kingfish; Seriola lalandi; aquaculture; fisheries; ontogeny; mariculture

资金

  1. Australia Academy of Sciences AustraliaAmerica Ph.D. Research Internship Program
  2. National Science Foundation PRFB Award [2011004]
  3. National Science Foundation [OCE-1837116]
  4. National Institutes of Health NIEHS [R01-ES030316]
  5. Australian Fisheries Research and Development Corporation project [2015/213]
  6. Div Of Biological Infrastructure
  7. Direct For Biological Sciences [2011004] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The fish gut microbiome is influenced by various factors such as fish feed formulations and the built environment, with the gills and skin being more impacted by the surrounding environment. Diversity of the mucosal microbiome decreases with age in the gut, while being lower in fish from ocean net pens compared to indoor fish. Feed has a relatively minor impact on the microbial communities, while aeration equipment plays a crucial role in microbiome development in marine fish.
The fish gut microbiome is impacted by a number of biological and environmental factors including fish feed formulations. Unlike mammals, vertical microbiome transmission is largely absent in fish and thus little is known about how the gut microbiome is initially colonized during hatchery rearing nor the stability throughout growout stages. Here we investigate how various microbial-rich surfaces from the built environment BE and feed influence the development of the mucosal microbiome (gill, skin, and digesta) of an economically important marine fish, yellowtail kingfish, Seriola lalandi, over time. For the first experiment, we sampled gill and skin microbiomes from 36 fish reared in three tank conditions, and demonstrate that the gill is more influenced by the surrounding environment than the skin. In a second experiment, fish mucous (gill, skin, and digesta), the BE (tank side, water, inlet pipe, airstones, and air diffusers) and feed were sampled from indoor reared fish at three ages (43, 137, and 430 dph; n = 12 per age). At 430 dph, 20 additional fish were sampled from an outdoor ocean net pen. A total of 304 samples were processed for 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Gill and skin alpha diversity increased while gut diversity decreased with age. Diversity was much lower in fish from the ocean net pen compared to indoor fish. The gill and skin are most influenced by the BE early in development, with aeration equipment having more impact in later ages, while the gut allochthonous microbiome becomes increasingly differentiated from the environment over time. Feed had a relatively low impact on driving microbial communities. Our findings suggest that S. lalandi mucosal microbiomes are differentially influenced by the BE with a high turnover and rapidsuccession occurring in the gill and skin while the gut microbiome is more stable. We demonstrate how individual components of a hatchery system, especially aeration equipment, may contribute directly to microbiome development in a marine fish. In addition, results demonstrate how early life (larval) exposure to biofouling in the rearing environment may influence fish microbiome development which is important for animal health and aquaculture production.

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