Abstract

BackgroundLagoons are important natural systems, with attractive favorable conditions for aquaculture production, such as shellfish cultivation. Despite their socio-economic relevance for human activity, information on the microbial diversity, community composition, and putative functions of gill-associated microbiota and seawater is still limited, particularly as regards the extent of specific taxa enrichment within the gills and the relative effects of the temporal and spatial variables. In this study, we used a 16S rDNA multi-amplicon sequencing approach using an Ion GeneStudio S5 System and a function prediction method (Functional Annotation of Prokaryotic Taxa (FAPROTAX), to inspect the springtime dynamics of microbial communities and their inferred metabolic features in an Adriatic lagoon (Po Delta, Italy).ResultsMussels and surrounding seawater were sampled in two rearing areas three times between April and June 2021. Sequencing results showed significant (p ≤ 0.05) differences in bacterial community composition and diversity between gills and seawater. Gills were dominated by the Methylobacterium-Methylorubrum and Burkholderia-Caballeronia-Paraburkholderia genera, while in seawater samples Izamaplasma, Planktomarina, and Candidatus Aquiluna were detected as being dominant. The microbiota composition did not differ significantly between the two rearing areas. The sampling time, although limited to a 3-month timeframe, instead revealed a structural variation of the bacterial profile both in gills and seawater for alpha and beta diversities respectively. The functional prediction analysis highlighted an overexpression of human gut-associated bacteria in relation to the season-related increase in seawater temperature.ConclusionsThese findings enhance our understanding of the differences between gill-associated and seawater microbiota composition and provide novel insights into the functions carried out by bacteria inhabiting these niches, as well as on the key host-symbiont relationships of bivalves in lagoon environments.

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