Refine
Document Type
- Article (4)
Language
- English (4)
Has Fulltext
- yes (4)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (4)
Keywords
- - (2)
- 18S rRNA (1)
- <i>Argiope bruennichi</i> (1)
- Araneae (1)
- DNA extraction bias (1)
- DNA preservation (1)
- Tenericutes (1)
- biofilm (1)
- endosymbiont (1)
- greenhouse gas (1)
Institute
Publisher
- MDPI (2)
- Nature Publishing Group (1)
- Wiley (1)
Mixotrophic and heterotrophic protists hold a key position in aquatic microbial food webs. Whereas they can account for the bulk of bacterivory in pelagic systems, the potential structuring effect of these consumers on bacterial communities is far from clear. We conducted short-term grazing experiments to test for the overall impact on bacterial community structure and possible prey preferences of phagotrophic protists. The protist taxa selected for this study include three mixotrophic flagellates, comprising two obligate- and one facultative mixotroph, and one phagoheterotrophic flagellate lacking phototrophic capacity. Bacterioplankton from seven different lakes were enriched and used to represent semi-natural prey communities. Our study demonstrated protist strain specific impacts on bacterial community composition linked to grazing. The three mixotrophs had variable impacts on bacterial communities where the two obligate mixotrophs exhibited lower grazing rates, while showing a tendency to promote higher bacterial diversity. The phagoheterotroph displayed the highest grazing rates and structured the bacterial communities via apparent selective grazing. Consistent selectivity trends were observed throughout the experiments, such as the apparent avoidance of all flagellates of Actinobacteria, and high grazing on dominant Burkholderiales taxa. However, there was no consistent “fingerprint” of mixotrophic grazing on prey communities, but the structuring impact rather seemed to depend on the trophic mode of the individual protist taxa, i.e. their dependence on phototrophy vs. phagotrophy. Our findings highlight the differential structuring impact of protist taxa on bacterial communities which may have important ecological implications, for example during periodic dominance of obligate mixotrophic bacterivores in changing lake ecosystems.
Drained peatlands are significant sources of the greenhouse gas (GHG) carbon dioxide.Rewetting is a proven strategy used to protect carbon stocks; however, it can lead to increasedemissions of the potent GHG methane. The response to rewetting of soil microbiomes as drivers ofthese processes is poorly understood, as are the biotic and abiotic factors that control communitycomposition. We analyzed the pro- and eukaryotic microbiomes of three contrasting pairs ofminerotrophic fens subject to decade-long drainage and subsequent long-term rewetting. Abiotic soilproperties including moisture, dissolved organic matter, methane fluxes, and ecosystem respirationrates were also determined. The composition of the microbiomes was fen-type-specific, but allrewetted sites showed higher abundances of anaerobic taxa compared to drained sites. Based onmulti-variate statistics and network analyses, we identified soil moisture as a major driver ofcommunity composition. Furthermore, salinity drove the separation between coastal and freshwaterfen communities. Methanogens were more than 10-fold more abundant in rewetted than in drainedsites, while their abundance was lowest in the coastal fen, likely due to competition with sulfatereducers. The microbiome compositions were reflected in methane fluxes from the sites. Our resultsshed light on the factors that structure fen microbiomes via environmental filtering.
Abstract
DNA extraction and preservation bias is a recurring topic in DNA sequencing‐based microbial ecology. The different methodologies can lead to distinct outcomes, which has been demonstrated especially in studies investigating prokaryotic community composition. Eukaryotic microbes are ubiquitous, diverse, and increasingly a subject of investigation in addition to bacteria and archaea. However, little is known about how the choice of DNA preservation and extraction methodology impacts perceived eukaryotic community composition. In this study, we compared the effect of two DNA preservation methods and six DNA extraction methods on the community profiles of both eukaryotes and prokaryotes in phototrophic biofilms on seagrass (Zostera marina) leaves from the Baltic Sea. We found that, whereas both DNA preservation and extraction method caused significant bias in perceived community composition for both eukaryotes and prokaryotes, extraction bias was more pronounced for eukaryotes than for prokaryotes. In particular, soft‐bodied and hard‐shelled eukaryotes like nematodes and diatoms, respectively, were differentially abundant depending on the extraction method. We conclude that careful consideration of DNA preservation and extraction methodology is crucial to achieving representative community profiles of eukaryotes in marine biofilms and likely all other habitats containing diverse eukaryotic microbial communities.