Abstract

BackgroundCold-water coral reef ecosystems are recognized as biodiversity hotspots in the deep sea, but insights into their associated bacterial communities are still limited. Deciphering principle patterns of bacterial community variation over multiple spatial scales may however prove critical for a better understanding of factors contributing to cold-water coral reef stability and functioning.Methodology/Principal FindingsBacterial community structure, as determined by Automated Ribosomal Intergenic Spacer Analysis (ARISA), was investigated with respect to (i) microbial habitat type and (ii) coral species and color, as well as the three spatial components (iii) geomorphologic reef zoning, (iv) reef boundary, and (v) reef location. Communities revealed fundamental differences between coral-generated (branch surface, mucus) and ambient microbial habitats (seawater, sediments). This habitat specificity appeared pivotal for determining bacterial community shifts over all other study levels investigated. Coral-derived surfaces showed species-specific patterns, differing significantly between Lophelia pertusa and Madrepora oculata, but not between L. pertusa color types. Within the reef center, no community distinction corresponded to geomorphologic reef zoning for both coral-generated and ambient microbial habitats. Beyond the reef center, however, bacterial communities varied considerably from local to regional scales, with marked shifts toward the reef periphery as well as between different in- and offshore reef sites, suggesting significant biogeographic imprinting but weak microbe-host specificity.Conclusions/SignificanceThis study presents the first multi-scale survey of bacterial diversity in cold-water coral reefs, spanning a total of five observational levels including three spatial scales. It demonstrates that bacterial communities in cold-water coral reefs are structured by multiple factors acting at different spatial scales, which has fundamental implications for the monitoring of microbial diversity and function in those ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Cold-water coral (CWC) reef ecosystems are increasingly portrayed as biodiversity hotspots on continental margins, seamounts and mid-ocean ridges around the world [1]

  • operational taxonomic units (OTUs) number was strongly related to microbial habitat type (KW, P,0.001), and to the reef site (P = 0.05; Fig. 3)

  • At Røst, mean OTU numbers showed a slight increase (P = 0.0398; Fig. 3) between reef center (Røst-in, 86611 OTUs) and reef periphery (Røst-out, 116662 OTUs), which was mainly related to branch and mucus variability

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cold-water coral (CWC) reef ecosystems are increasingly portrayed as biodiversity hotspots on continental margins, seamounts and mid-ocean ridges around the world [1]. They appear as speciose, abundant and widespread as their warm-water counterparts [2,3,4,5], and represent important species pools [6,7,8] and speciation centers [9] in the deep sea. By forming enormous dendritic skeletal frameworks, these corals provide complex three-dimensional living space for a plethora of mobile and sessile organisms [7,8,12] They alter flow regimes and sedimentation rates, thereby modifying the abiotic environment in time and space ([1] and references therein). Deciphering principle patterns of bacterial community variation over multiple spatial scales may prove critical for a better understanding of factors contributing to cold-water coral reef stability and functioning

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call