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Gut Microbiota of Five Sympatrically Farmed Marine Fish Species in the Aegean Sea

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Auteur
Nikouli E., Meziti A., Smeti E., Antonopoulou E., Mente E., Kormas K.A.
Date
2021
Language
en
DOI
10.1007/s00248-020-01580-z
Sujet
RNA 16S
animal
bacterium
classification
diet
fish
fishery
genetics
Greece
growth, development and aging
intestine flora
isolation and purification
Mediterranean Sea
microbiology
species difference
veterinary medicine
Animals
Bacteria
Diet
Fisheries
Fishes
Gastrointestinal Microbiome
Greece
Mediterranean Sea
RNA, Ribosomal, 16S
Species Specificity
Springer
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Résumé
In this study, we hypothesized that sympatrically grown farmed fish, i.e. fish which experience similar environmental conditions and nutritionally similar diets, would have more convergent gut microbiota. Using a “common garden” approach, we identified the core microbiota and bacterial community structure differences between five fish species farmed in the same aquaculture site on the west coast of the Aegean Sea, Greece. The investigated individuals were at similar developmental stages and reared in adjacent (< 50 m) aquaculture cages; each cage had 15 kg fish m−3. The diets were nutritionally similar to support optimal growth for each fish species. DNA from the midgut of 3–6 individuals per fish species was extracted and sequenced for the V3–V4 region of the bacterial 16S rRNA. Only 3.9% of the total 181 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were shared among all fish. Between 5 and 74 OTUs were unique to each fish species. Each of the investigated fish species had a distinct profile of dominant OTUs, i.e. cumulative relative abundance of ≥ 80%. Co-occurrence network analysis for each fish species showed that all networks were strongly dominated by positive correlations between the abundances of their OTUs. However, each fish species had different network characteristics suggesting the differential significance of the OTUs in each of the five fish species midgut. The results of the present study may provide evidence that adult fish farmed in the Mediterranean Sea have a rather divergent and species-specific gut microbiota profile, which are shaped independently of the similar environmental conditions under which they grow. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11615/77229
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