Abstract

BackgroundTetrapods do not express hydrolases for cellulose and hemicellulose assimilation, and hence, the independent acquisition of herbivory required the establishment of new endosymbiotic relationships between tetrapods and microbes. Green turtles (Chelonia mydas) are one of the three groups of marine tetrapods with an herbivorous diet and which acquire it after several years consuming pelagic animals. We characterized the microbiota present in the feces and rectum of 24 young wild and captive green turtles from the coastal waters of Brazil, with curved carapace length ranging from 31.1 to 64.7 cm, to test the hypotheses that (1) the ontogenetic dietary shift after settlement is followed by a gradual change in the composition and diversity of the gut microbiome, (2) differences exist between the composition and diversity of the gut microbiome of green turtles from tropical and subtropical regions, and (3) the consumption of omnivorous diets modifies the gut microbiota of green turtles.ResultsA genomic library of 2,186,596 valid bacterial 16S rRNA reads was obtained and these sequences were grouped into 6321 different operational taxonomic units (at 97% sequence homology cutoff). The results indicated that most of the juvenile green turtles less than 45 cm of curved carapace length exhibited a fecal microbiota co-dominated by representatives of the phyla Bacteroidetes and Firmicutes and high levels of Clostridiaceae, Prophyromonas, Ruminococaceae, and Lachnospiraceae within the latter phylum. Furthermore, this was the only microbiota profile found in wild green turtles > 45 cm CCL and in most of the captive green turtles of any size feeding on a macroalgae/fish mixed diet. Nevertheless, microbial diversity increased with turtle size and was higher in turtles from tropical than from subtropical regions.ConclusionsThese results indicate that juvenile green turtles from the coastal waters of Brazil had the same general microbiota, regardless of body size and origin, and suggest a fast acquisition of a polysaccharide fermenting gut microbiota by juvenile green turtles after settlement into coastal habitats.

Highlights

  • Tetrapods do not express hydrolases for cellulose and hemicellulose assimilation, and the independent acquisition of herbivory required the establishment of new endosymbiotic relationships between tetrapods and microbes

  • The gut microbiome of 24 green turtles ranging in curved carapace length (CCL) from 31.1 to 64.7 cm was studied

  • A genomic library of 2,187,066 valid eubacterial 16S rRNA reads was obtained from their feces (Additional file 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Tetrapods do not express hydrolases for cellulose and hemicellulose assimilation, and the independent acquisition of herbivory required the establishment of new endosymbiotic relationships between tetrapods and microbes. Green turtles exhibit a much larger dietary flexibility than sirenians and marine iguanas, as they undergo a major ontogenetic dietary shift from animal-based to plantbased diets following settlement in coastal areas [19,20,21,22,23,24,25] They exhibit a high level of regional variability in the degree of omnivory after settlement and the relative importance of seagrasses and seaweeds in their diets [20, 21, 23, 26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34]

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