Abstract

Ironwood trees (Casuarina equisetifolia) in Guam have been suffering from Ironwood Tree Decline (IWTD) since 2002. Putative plant pathogenic bacteria such as Ralstonia solanacearum and Klebsiella species were identified in the ooze of declining trees and considered to be linked to IWTD. In addition, termites were found to be significantly associated with IWTD. Microcerotermes crassus Snyder (Blattodea: Termitidae) was identified as a termite species that attacks ironwood trees in Guam. Since termites harbor a diverse community of symbiotic and environmental bacteria, we sequenced the microbiome of M. crassus workers attacking ironwood trees in Guam to assess the presence of IWTD-associated pathogens in termite bodies. This dataset contains 652,571 raw sequencing reads present in M. crassus worker samples collected from six ironwood trees in Guam obtained via sequencing the V4 region of the16S rRNA gene on the Illumina NovaSeq (2 × 250bp) platform. Sequences were taxonomically assigned in QIIME2 using SILVA 132 and NCBI GenBank as reference databases. Spirochaetes and Fibrobacteres were the most dominant phyla in M. crassus workers. No putative plant pathogens of the genera Ralstonia or Klebsiella were found in the M. crassus samples. The dataset has been made publicly available through NCBI GenBank under BioProject ID PRJNA883256. This dataset can be used to compare the bacterial taxa present in M. crassus workers in Guam to bacteria communities of related termite species from other geographical locations. In addition, this dataset can also be used to investigate the relationship between termite microbiomes and the microbiomes of ironwood trees they attack and of the surrounding soil.

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