Abstract

Invasive plants, including marine macrophytes, are one of the most important threats to biodiversity by displacing native species and organisms depending on them. Invasion success is dependent on interactions among living organisms, but their study has been mostly limited to negative interactions while positive interactions are mostly underlooked. Recent studies suggested that microorganisms associated with eukaryotic hosts may play a determinant role in the invasion process. Along with the knowledge of their structure, taxonomic composition, and potential functional profile, understanding how bacterial communities are associated with the invasive species and the threatened natives (species-specific/environmentally shaped/tissue-specific) can give us a holistic insight into the invasion mechanisms. Here, we aimed to compare the bacterial communities associated with leaves and roots of two native Caribbean seagrasses (Halodule wrightii and Thalassia testudinum) with those of the successful invader Halophila stipulacea, in the Caribbean island Curaçao, using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing and functional prediction. Invasive seagrass microbiomes were more diverse and included three times more species-specific core OTUs than the natives. Associated bacterial communities were seagrass-specific, with higher similarities between natives than between invasive and native seagrasses for both communities associated with leaves and roots, despite their strong tissue differentiation. However, with a higher number of OTUs in common, the core community (i.e., OTUs occurring in at least 80% of the samples) of the native H. wrightii was more similar to that of the invader H. stipulacea than T. testudinum, which could reflect more similar essential needs (e.g., nutritional, adaptive, and physiological) between native and invasive, in contrast to the two natives that might share more environment-related OTUs. Relative to native seagrass species, the invasive H. stipulacea was enriched in halotolerant bacterial genera with plant growth-promoting properties (like Halomonas sp. and Lysinibacillus sp.) and other potential beneficial effects for hosts (e.g., heavy metal detoxifiers and quorum sensing inhibitors). Predicted functional profiles also revealed some advantageous traits on the invasive species such as detoxification pathways, protection against pathogens, and stress tolerance. Despite the predictive nature of our findings concerning the functional potential of the bacteria, this investigation provides novel and important insights into native vs. invasive seagrasses microbiome. We demonstrated that the bacterial community associated with the invasive seagrass H. stipulacea is different from native seagrasses, including some potentially beneficial bacteria, suggesting the importance of considering the microbiome dynamics as a possible and important influencing factor in the colonization of non-indigenous species. We suggest further comparison of H. stipulacea microbiome from its native range with that from both the Mediterranean and Caribbean habitats where this species has a contrasting invasion success. Also, our new findings open doors to a more in-depth investigation combining meta-omics with bacterial manipulation experiments in order to confirm any functional advantage in the microbiome of this invasive seagrass.

Highlights

  • In both terrestrial and aquatic environments, invasive plant and macrophyte species pose a direct threat to the biodiversity of their newly acquired habitat (Boudouresque and Verlaque, 2002; Sharma et al, 2005)

  • This study revealed that bacterial communities are different between the three seagrass species in Curaçao, where the invasive species holds a more diverse bacterial community compared to the native ones, with three times more species-specific operational taxonomic units (OTUs)

  • Bacterial community structure follows a species-specific pattern with some influence of the environment, and that pattern holds for both leaves and roots

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Summary

Introduction

In both terrestrial and aquatic environments, invasive plant and macrophyte species pose a direct threat to the biodiversity of their newly acquired habitat (Boudouresque and Verlaque, 2002; Sharma et al, 2005). Newly introduced species are regarded as invasive when, as a consequence of their influence (direct or indirect) on the natural habitat and food chain, the diversity and abundance of native species (plants or other organisms depending on them for food/shelter/nursery, etc.) are decreased. Most of the studies on invasive species explore the negative biotic interactions (e.g., predation and competition), whereas positive interactions are mostly underlooked, especially those promoted by microorganisms (often considered pathogens). Recently have these been started to be explored by a few studies, suggesting that microorganisms can play a determinant role in invasions (Klock et al, 2015; Aires et al, 2016; Arnaud-Haond et al, 2017). Some of those microbe–host positive interaction and its possible role in the invasion process will be detailed below

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