Metagenomics of Coral Reefs Under Phase Shift and High Hydrodynamics.

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY(2018)

引用 14|浏览28
暂无评分
摘要
Local and global stressors have affected coral reef ecosystems worldwide. Switches from coral to algal dominance states and microbialization are the major processes underlying the global decline of coral reefs. However, most of the knowledge concerning microbialization has not considered physical disturbances (e.g., typhoons, waves, and currents). Southern Japan reef systems have developed under extreme physical disturbances. Here, we present analyses of a three-year investigation on the coral reefs of Ishigaki Island that comprised benthic and fish surveys, water quality analyses, metagenomics and microbial abundance data. At the four studied sites, inorganic nutrient concentrations were high and exceeded eutrophication thresholds. The dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration (up to 233.3 mu M) and microbial abundance (up to 2.5 x 10(5) cell/mL) values were relatively high. The highest vibrio counts coincided with the highest turf cover (similar to 55-85%) and the lowest coral cover (similar to 4.4-10.2%) and fish biomass (0.06 individuals/m(2)). Microbiome compositions were similar among all sites and were dominated by heterotrophs. Our data suggest that a synergic effect among several regional stressors are driving coral decline. In a high hydrodynamics reef environment, high algal/turf cover, stimulated by eutrophication and low fish abundance due to overfishing, promote microbialization. Together with crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS) outbreaks and possible of climate changes impacts, theses coral reefs are likely to collapse.
更多
查看译文
关键词
coral reefs,microbialization,local stressors,early warning signals,metagenomics,resistence,hydrodynamics
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要