Abstract

The genus Vibrio is a metabolically diverse group of facultative anaerobic bacteria, common in aquatic environments and marine hosts. The genus contains several species of importance to human health and aquaculture, including the causative agents of human cholera and fish vibriosis. Vibrios display a wide variety of known life histories, from opportunistic pathogens to long-standing symbionts with individual host species. Studying Vibrio ecology has been challenging as individual species often display a wide range of habitat preferences, and groups of vibrios can act as socially cohesive groups. Although strong associations with salinity, temperature and other environmental variables have been established, the degree of habitat or host specificity at both the individual and community levels is unknown. Here we use oligotyping analyses in combination with a large collection of existing Vibrio 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequence data to reveal patterns of Vibrio ecology across a wide range of environmental, host, and abiotic substrate associated habitats. Our data show that individual taxa often display a wide range of habitat preferences yet tend to be highly abundant in either substrate-associated or free-living environments. Our analyses show that Vibrio communities share considerable overlap between two distinct hosts (i.e., sponge and fish), yet are distinct from the abiotic plastic substrates. Lastly, evidence for habitat specificity at the community level exists in some habitats, despite considerable stochasticity in others. In addition to providing insights into Vibrio ecology across a broad range of habitats, our study shows the utility of oligotyping as a facile, high-throughput and unbiased method for large-scale analyses of publically available sequence data repositories and suggests its wide application could greatly extend the range of possibilities to explore microbial ecology.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSpeciose and commercially important bacterial genus with both host associated and free-living representatives

  • Vibrio is a ubiquitous, speciose and commercially important bacterial genus with both host associated and free-living representatives

  • We suggest both of these characteristics, combined with previous understanding of rapid growth rates (McDonough et al, 2013; Skorupski and Taylor, 2013) fit the description of an “r-strategist” life history

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Summary

Introduction

Speciose and commercially important bacterial genus with both host associated and free-living representatives. Vibrio pathogens are important to the aquaculture industry, where they inflict costly losses on farmed fish, mollusks and shrimp (Austin and Austin, 2007), limiting the development of an industry poised to help bridge global food gaps and preserve wild fisheries (FAO, 2012). Due to their importance to human and animal welfare, and the ease with which they are cultured, vibrios are relatively well studied, with over 570 publicly available annotated genomes and over 64,000 16S rRNA gene sequences annotated as vibrios in GenBank as of March 2014. Vibrio represents an ideal candidate for applying new analytical approaches using pre-existing data to gain further insights into the ecology of the genus

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