Abstract

Marine lakes represent a unique and globally rare aquatic environment characterised by lower salinities and pH and higher temperatures than the surrounding open water environment. Here we provide baseline data on planktonic communities of Archaea, Bacteria and microeukaryotes inside and outside (open water habitat) of three marine lakes (Kakaban, Haji Buang and Tanah Bamban) in the Berau region of Indonesia. Compositional variation was highly congruent with the major axis of variation separating open water from marine lake samples for all three domains. Planktonic Archaea mainly consisted of OTUs assigned to Euryarchaeota that were closely related to organisms in Genbank previously obtained from seawater samples. The majority of archaeal OTUs were most abundant in open water habitat with a few OTUs abundant in all habitats. Most bacterial sequences were assigned to Proteobacteria, Cyanobacteria and Bacteroidetes with the percentage of Cyanobacteria highest in two of the marine lakes and lowest in the remaining lake (Tanah Bamban). In contrast to Archaea, there were a number of bacterial OTUs that were markedly more abundant in marine lake habitat. Most microeukaryote sequences were assigned to the Alveolata, Stramenopiles, Opisthokonta, Archaeplastida and Hacrobia. As was the case with Bacteria, a number of abundant microeukaryote OTUs were more abundant in marine lake habitat. Our results thus indicate similar compositional responses to the environmental conditions in marine lake habitat across the major domains of life and point to marine lakes harbouring distinct microbial communities.

Highlights

  • Marine lakes, known as anchialine lakes, are bodies of saline water surrounded by land and connected to the open water marine environment by fissures and channels (Tomascik et al, 1997; Becking et al, 2013)

  • We focused on marine lakes located within the islands of Kakaban and Maratua in the Berau region of Indonesia and samples from coastal sites surrounding these islands

  • Sequencing yielded 48028 sequences, assigned to 113 archaeal operational taxonomic units (OTUs), 25749 sequences assigned to 816 bacterial OTUs and 359058 sequences assigned to 3176 microeukaryote OTUs

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Summary

Introduction

Known as anchialine lakes, are bodies of saline water surrounded by land and connected to the open water marine environment by fissures and channels (Tomascik et al, 1997; Becking et al, 2013). The size of these fissures and channels is a strong determinant of the local environmental characteristics. Marine lakes are characterised by having elevated temperatures, lower salinities and lower pH compared to the surrounding open water marine environment (Becking et al, 2011). The sponge fauna differs strongly from that found in the open water marine environment and includes a large number of presumably endemic species (Becking et al, 2013)

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