Summary Coral‐associated microorganisms are thought to play a fundamental role in the health and ecology of corals, but understanding of specific coral–microbial interactions are lacking. In order to create a framework to examine coral–microbial specificity, we integrated and phylogenetically compared 21,100 SSU rRNA gene Sanger‐produced sequences from bacteria and archaea associated with corals from previous studies, and accompanying host, location and publication metadata, to produce the Coral Microbiome Database. From this database, we identified 39 described and candidate phyla of Bacteria and two Archaea phyla associated with corals, demonstrating that corals are one of the most phylogenetically diverse animal microbiomes. Secondly, this new phylogenetic resource shows that certain microorganisms are indeed specific to corals, including evolutionary distinct hosts. Specifically, we identified 2–37 putative monophyletic, coral‐specific sequence clusters within bacterial genera associated with the greatest number of coral species (Vibrio,EndozoicomonasandRuegeria) as well as functionally relevant microbial taxa (“CandidatusAmoebophilus”, “CandidatusNitrosopumilus” and under recognized cyanobacteria). This phylogenetic resource provides a framework for more targeted studies of corals and their specific microbial associates, which is timely given the escalated need to understand the role of the coral microbiome and its adaptability to changing ocean and reef conditions.
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Evidence for microbially-mediated tradeoffs between growth and defense throughout coral evolution
Abstract BackgroundEvolutionary tradeoffs between life-history strategies are important in animal evolution. Because microbes can influence multiple aspects of host physiology, including growth rate and susceptibility to disease or stress, changes in animal-microbial symbioses have the potential to mediate life-history tradeoffs. Scleractinian corals provide a biodiverse, data-rich, and ecologically-relevant host system to explore this idea. ResultsUsing a comparative approach, we tested if coral microbiomes correlate with disease susceptibility across 425 million years of coral evolution by conducting a cross-species coral microbiome survey (the “Global Coral Microbiome Project”) and combining the results with long-term global disease prevalence and coral trait data. Interpreting these data in their phylogenetic context, we show that microbial dominance predicts disease susceptibility, and traced this dominance-disease association to a single putatively beneficial symbiont genus,Endozoicomonas. Endozoicomonasrelative abundance in coral tissue explained 30% of variation in disease susceptibility and 60% of variation in microbiome dominance across 40 coral genera, while also correlating strongly with high growth rates. ConclusionsThese results demonstrate that the evolution ofEndozoicomonassymbiosis in corals correlates with both disease prevalence and growth rate, and suggest a mediating role. Exploration of the mechanistic basis for these findings will be important for our understanding of how microbial symbioses influence animal life-history tradeoffs.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1942647
- PAR ID:
- 10564557
- Publisher / Repository:
- Springer Science + Business Media
- Date Published:
- Journal Name:
- Animal Microbiome
- Volume:
- 7
- Issue:
- 1
- ISSN:
- 2524-4671
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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