Baseline microbiomes of the pillar coral Dendrogyra cylindrus reveal novel taxa and regional differences
Baseline microbiomes of the pillar coral Dendrogyra cylindrus reveal novel taxa and regional differences
Cauvin, A.; Carne, L.; Marhaver, K. L.; Vermeij, M. J. A.; Locatelli, N. S.; Baums, I. B.; Paul, V.; Meyer, J. L.
AbstractThe pillar coral Dendrogyra cylindrus is a rare but iconic member of Caribbean reefs that has suffered range-wide losses. D. cylindrus is highly susceptible to stony coral tissue loss disease (SCTLD), and the outbreak has contributed to the functional extinction of Florida's population of pillar corals. The coral microbiome can impact the health and disease resistance of coral colonies, yet little is known about what constitutes the core microbiome of D. cylindrus. This information is crucial for comparisons of healthy and diseased tissue in pathogen identification studies and can be applied to restoration efforts as a coral health metric. Therefore, we characterized the microbiomes of D. cylindrus colonies ahead of the SCTLD disease front in Belize and Curacao. The most prevalent members of the D. cylindrus microbial community were bacteria for which taxonomy could not be assigned confidently beyond the level of domain as well as the putatively endosymbiotic genera Endozoicomonas, Ca. Amoebophilus, and Spiroplasma. The coral reefs of Belize and Curacao represent distinct Caribbean marine ecoregions, and we documented regional differences in strains among predominant bacterial taxa. The understudied microbiome of D. cylindrus harbors unique bacterial lineages that are in danger of extinction along with its critically endangered coral host, and these bacterial lineages may be important bioindicators during restoration efforts.