Exceptional but vulnerable microbial diversity in coral reef animal surface microbiomes
Author(s) -
Marlène Chiarello,
JeanChristophe Auguet,
Nicholas A. J. Graham,
Thomas Claverie,
Elliott Sucré,
Corinne Bouvier,
Fabien Rieuvilleneuve,
Claudia Ximena RestrepoOrtiz,
Yvan Bettarel,
Sébastien Villéger,
Thierry Bouvier
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
proceedings of the royal society b biological sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.342
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1471-2954
pISSN - 0962-8452
DOI - 10.1098/rspb.2020.0642
Subject(s) - reef , species richness , ecology , coral reef , biology , microbiome , coral , coral reef protection , aquaculture of coral , phylogenetic diversity , invertebrate , environmental issues with coral reefs , phylogenetic tree , bioinformatics , biochemistry , gene
Coral reefs host hundreds of thousands of animal species that are increasingly threatened by anthropogenic disturbances. These animals host microbial communities at their surface, playing crucial roles for their fitness. However, the diversity of such microbiomes is mostly described in a few coral species and still poorly defined in other invertebrates and vertebrates. Given the diversity of animal microbiomes, and the diversity of host species inhabiting coral reefs, the contribution of such microbiomes to the total microbial diversity of coral reefs could be important, yet potentially vulnerable to the loss of animal species. Analysis of the surface microbiome from 74 taxa, including teleost fishes, hard and soft corals, crustaceans, echinoderms, bivalves and sponges, revealed that more than 90% of their prokaryotic phylogenetic richness was specific and not recovered in surrounding plankton. Estimate of the total richness associated with coral reef animal surface microbiomes reached up to 2.5% of current estimates of Earth prokaryotic diversity. Therefore, coral reef animal surfaces should be recognized as a hotspot of marine microbial diversity. Loss of the most vulnerable reef animals expected under present-day scenarios of reef degradation would induce an erosion of 28% of the prokaryotic richness, with unknown consequences on coral reef ecosystem functioning.
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