Meine Merkliste
my.bionity.com  
Login  

Summary

It has long been recognized that sponges differ in the abundance of associated microbes and they are therefore termed either “low microbial abundance” (LMA) or “high microbial abundance” (HMA) sponges. Many previous studies concentrated on the dense microbial communities in HMA sponges whereas little is known about microbes in LMA sponges. Here, two LMA sponges from the Red Sea, two from the Caribbean, and one from the South Pacific were investigated. With up to only five bacterial phyla per sponge, all LMA sponges showed a lower phylum‐level diversity than typical HMA sponges. Interestingly, each LMA sponge was dominated by a large clade within either Cyanobacteria or different classes of Proteobacteria. The overall similarity of bacterial communities among LMA sponges determined by OTU and UniFrac analysis was low. Also the number of sponge‐specific clusters, which indicate bacteria specifically associated with sponges and which are numerous in HMA sponges, was low. A biogeographical or host‐dependent distribution pattern was not observed. In conclusion, bacterial community profiles of LMA sponges are clearly different from profiles of HMA sponges and, remarkably, each LMA sponge seems to harbor its own unique bacterial community.

© 2012 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved

Autoren:   Emily C. Giles, Janine Kamke, Lucas Moitinho‐Silva, Michael W. Taylor, Ute Hentschel, Timothy Ravasi, Susanne Schmitt
Journal:   FEMS Microbiology Ecology
Jahrgang:   2012
Seiten:   n/a
DOI:   10.1111/j.1574-6941.2012.01467.x
Erscheinungsdatum:   11.08.2012

Merkliste

Hier setzen Sie die nebenstehende Fachpublikation auf Ihre persönliche Merkliste.

Zusatzinformationen

Mehr über Wiley
Ihr Bowser ist nicht aktuell. Microsoft Internet Explorer 6.0 unterstützt einige Funktionen auf Chemie.DE nicht.