Abstract

BackgroundThe amphibian skin microbiome is an important mediator of host health and serves as a potential source of undiscovered scientifically significant compounds. However, the underlying modalities of how amphibian hosts obtain their initial skin-associated microbiome remains unclear. Here, we explore microbial transmission patterns in foam-nest breeding tree frogs from Southeast Asia (Genus: Polypedates) whose specialized breeding strategy allows for better delineation between vertically and environmentally derived microbes. To facilitate this, we analyzed samples associated with adult frog pairs taken after mating—including adults of each sex, their foam nests, environments, and tadpoles before and after environmental interaction—for the bacterial communities using DNA metabarcoding data (16S rRNA). Samples were collected from frogs in-situ in Brunei, Borneo, a previously unsampled region for amphibian-related microbial diversity.ResultsAdult frogs differed in skin bacterial communities among species, but tadpoles did not differ among species. Foam nests had varying bacterial community composition, most notably in the nests’ moist interior. Nest interior bacterial communities were discrete for each nest and overall displayed a narrower diversity compared to the nest exteriors. Tadpoles sampled directly from the foam nest displayed a bacterial composition less like the nest interior and more similar to that of the adults and nest exterior. After one week of pond water interaction the tadpole skin microbiome shifted towards the tadpole skin and pond water microbial communities being more tightly coupled than between tadpoles and the internal nest environment, but not to the extent that the skin microbiome mirrored the pond bacterial community.ConclusionsBoth vertical influence and environmental interaction play a role in shaping the tadpole cutaneous microbiome. Interestingly, the interior of the foam nest had a distinct bacterial community from the tadpoles suggesting a limited environmental effect on tadpole cutaneous bacterial selection at initial stages of life. The shift in the tadpole microbiome after environmental interaction indicates an interplay between underlying host and ecological mechanisms that drive community formation. This survey serves as a baseline for further research into the ecology of microbial transmission in aquatic animals.

Highlights

  • The amphibian skin microbiome is an important mediator of host health and serves as a potential source of undiscovered scientifically significant compounds

  • Our results provide the first characterization of the skin microbiome of the studied species and the first record of amphibian microbiomes from Borneo

  • Microbial communities overview We had a total of 1,377,542 high-quality sequences that represented 2850 distinct operational taxonomic units (OTUs) from all environmental and amphibian-associated samples (n = 81; Fig. 1 and Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

The amphibian skin microbiome is an important mediator of host health and serves as a potential source of undiscovered scientifically significant compounds. Amphibians possess a unique interconnectedness with their microbial and macroscopic environment due to two important traits: the metamorphic process of many species and their semi-permeable skin. At each amphibian life stage gas exchange is facilitated via semi-permeable skin (obligate, facultative, or changing with life stage) opening up the host to greater environmental influence [8]. To avoid dehydration in terrestrial habitats and to facilitate cutaneous respiration most amphibian species require a persistent layer of mucus covering the skin which creates a hospitable environment for microbial proliferation [9]. Microbiota that inhabit this mucus layer are recognized as affecting host health [5]. Amphibians provide a unique circumstance in which to analyze the hostmicrobiome-environmental intersection

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