Abstract

Crustose coralline red algae (CCA) are important components of marine ecosystems thriving from tropical waters and up to the poles. They fulfill important ecological services including framework building and induction of larval settlement. Like other marine organisms, CCAs have not been spared by the increase in marine disease outbreaks. The white-band syndrome has been recently observed in corallines from the Mediterranean Sea indicating that the disease threat has extended from tropical to temperate waters. Here, we examined the microbiome and the pathobiome of healthy and diseased Neogoniolithon brassica-florida coralline algae in the Mediterranean Sea by combining culture-dependent and -independent approaches. The coralline white-band syndrome was associated with a distinct pathobiome compared to healthy tissues and showed similarities with the white-band syndrome described in the Caribbean Sea. A sequence related to the genus Hoeflea, order Rhizobiales, characterized the white-band disease pathobiome described by amplicon sequencing. No representative of this genus was isolated by culture. We, however, successfully isolated an abundant member of the healthy CCA microbiome, an Alphaproteobateria of the family Rhodobacteraceae. In conclusion, we did not identify a potential causative agent of the disease, but through the complementarity of culture dependent and independent approaches we characterized the healthy microbiome of the coralline and the possible opportunistic bacteria colonizing diseased tissues.

Highlights

  • Crustose coralline algae (CCA, Corallinales, Rhodophyta) are important components of underwater seascapes

  • Crustose coralline red algae (CCA) have not been spared by the increase in marine disease outbreaks observed in the past decades (Harvell et al, 1999; Ward and Lafferty, 2004)

  • Our hypotheses are that (1) to what is known from the Caribbean, the whiteband disease found in temperate waters have a distinct pathobiome, (2) a causative agent could be isolated and grown in culture. To test these hypotheses we examined the microbiomes using a combined culture dependent and -independent approach, which has never been used in CCA disease investigations

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Summary

Introduction

Crustose coralline algae (CCA, Corallinales, Rhodophyta) are important components of underwater seascapes. Only one study has investigated the microbiome associated with CCA-diseased tissue (Meistertzheim et al, 2017). The CCA diseased samples that were used for the amplicon sequencing were used for the cultivation of bacteria.

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