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Increased Bacterial Richness Associated With Lesions Within the Porites spp. of Vietnam

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dc.contributor.author Rasmussen, Linett
dc.contributor.author Barnes, Christopher
dc.contributor.author Mak, Sarah Siu Tze
dc.contributor.author Kjartansdóttir, Kristín Rós
dc.contributor.author Hansen, Thomas Arn
dc.contributor.author Doan, Nhu Hai
dc.contributor.author Nguyen, Ngoc Lam
dc.contributor.author Frøslev, Tobias Guldberg
dc.contributor.author Hellström, Micaela
dc.contributor.author Hansen, Anders Johannes
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-06T07:54:20Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-06T07:54:20Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.uri http://113.160.249.209:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/20260
dc.description.abstract Coral reefs worldwide are rapidly declining due to increasing anthropogenic stressors and environmental changes, with large-scale mortalities of coral reefs observed in many locations across the globe. It has become clear that the microbiome of corals is important in understanding the causes of coral infections, although its exact role is yet to be fully understood. Here, we characterize the bacteria and fungi associated with the non-lesional and lesional (identified by discoloration and tissue loss) tissues of coral species from Vietnam. Metabarcoding of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene and the fungal ITS rRNA gene region were performed. We sampled across two Porites species with potentially multiple causes of stresses, yet the bacterial compositions of lesional regions were consistently different from non-lesional areas of the same coral. These differences were driven by a considerable and significant increase in OTU richness within the lesional region compared to the non-lesional region. While no single OTU was consistently associated with lesional tissue, indicator analysis revealed that nine OTUs were significantly more persistent in the lesional regions that could represent useful bioindicators of stress. Meanwhile, there were no indicator OTUs in the non-lesional region. Further investigations are needed to determine whether changing bacterial communities play a mechanistic role in inducing lesioning, or are opportunistically colonizing stressed vi,en
dc.language.iso en vi,en
dc.relation.ispartofseries Frontier in Ecology and Evolution, 27 May 2020, https://doi.org/10.3389/fevo.2020.00151;
dc.subject Vietnam vi,en
dc.subject Coral reef vi,en
dc.subject Porites spp. vi,en
dc.subject Metabarcoding vi,en
dc.subject Bacterial 16S rRNA gene vi,en
dc.subject Fungal ITS rRNA gene vi,en
dc.title Increased Bacterial Richness Associated With Lesions Within the Porites spp. of Vietnam vi,en
dc.type Working Paper vi,en


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