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Free, publicly-accessible full text available December 1, 2025
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Durham, Bryndan P; Johnson, Winifred M; Bannon, Catherine C; Bertrand, Erin M; Ingalls, Anitra E; Edwards, Bethanie R; Apprill, Amy; Boysen, Angela K; Bundy, Randelle M; Chen, Huan; et al (, Limnology and Oceanography Letters)Abstract The ocean microbe‐metabolite network involves thousands of individual metabolites that encompass a breadth of chemical diversity and biological functions. These microbial metabolites mediate biogeochemical cycles, facilitate ecological relationships, and impact ecosystem health. While analytical advancements have begun to illuminate such roles, a challenge in navigating the deluge of marine metabolomics information is to identify a subset of metabolites that have the greatest ecosystem impact. Here, we present an ecological framework to distill knowledge of fundamental metabolites that underpin marine ecosystems. We borrow terms from macroecology that describe important species, namely “dominant,” “keystone,” and “indicator” species, and apply these designations to metabolites within the ocean microbial metabolome. These selected metabolites may shape marine community structure, function, and health and provide focal points for enhanced study of microbe‐metabolite networks. Applying ecological concepts to marine metabolites provides a path to leverage metabolomics data to better describe and predict marine microbial ecosystems.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available July 19, 2026
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Reigel, Alicia M.; Easson, Cole G.; Apprill, Amy; Freeman, Christopher J.; Bartley, Michaela M.; Fiore, Cara L. (, Communications Biology)Abstract Coral reef biodiversity is maintained by a complex network of nutrient recycling among organisms. Sponges assimilate nutrients produced by other organisms like coral and algae, releasing them as particulate and dissolved matter, but to date, only a single trophic link between sponge-derived dissolved matter and a macroalgae has been identified. We sought to determine if sponge-coral nutrient exchange is reciprocal using a stable isotope ‘pulse-chase’ experiment to trace the uptake of13C and15N sponge-derived matter by the coral holobiont for three coral species (Acropora cervicornis, Orbicella faveolata, andEunicea flexuosa). Coral holobionts incorporated 2.3–26.8x more15N than13C from sponge-derived matter andA. cervicornisincorporated more of both C and N than the other corals. Differential isotopic incorporation among coral species aligns with their ecophysiological characteristics (e.g., morphology, Symbiodiniaceae density). Our results elucidate a recycling pathway on coral reefs that has implications for improving coral aquaculture and management approaches.more » « less
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