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Substrate identity structures reef microbiomes: crustose coralline algae harbor distinctive assemblages in Palk Bay reef, India
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Introduction
Coral reef resilience is strongly influenced by microbial communities associated with diverse benthic substrates. However, microbiomes beyond corals remain poorly characterized in the Indian Ocean. This study provides the first cross-substrate microbial baseline from Palk Bay, southeast India.
Methods
We used 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing to characterize bacterial communities associated with corals, crustose coralline algae (CCA), rubble, sediments, and seawater. Alpha and beta diversity metrics, taxonomic composition, and genus-level co-occurrence network analyses were performed to compare microbial assemblages across substrates.
Results
Bacterial alpha diversity was broadly similar among substrates, whereas beta diversity showed strong compositional segregation (PERMANOVA, Bray–Curtis:
F
= 5.35,
R²
= 0.742,
p
= 0.001). Each substrate harbored distinct microbial assemblages. Corals displayed host-linked signatures (e.g.,
Favia
enriched in
Ruegeria
), sediments were dominated by
Woeseia
and
Desulfovibrio
, seawater by pelagic taxa (
Pelagibacterales
,
Synechococcus
), and CCA by
Rhodobacteraceae
members (
Roseospira
,
Labrenzia
,
Ruegeria
). CCA-associated
Rhodobacteraceae
, known to produce larval settlement inducers, suggest a potential role in coral recruitment. Environmental substrates, particularly sediment and rubble, contained the highest number of unique genera, indicating their function as microbial reservoirs. Only a few generalist taxa, notably
Pelagibius
, were shared across all substrates. Network analysis identified CCA as a highly connected node within the benthic microbial community.
Discussion
These findings demonstrate that reef microbial communities are strongly substrate-specific rather than defined by a conserved core microbiome. The results establish a regional microbial baseline for Indian reefs and highlight the ecological significance of CCA-associated microbial assemblages in supporting reef resilience and potential coral recruitment processes.
Title: Substrate identity structures reef microbiomes: crustose coralline algae harbor distinctive assemblages in Palk Bay reef, India
Description:
Introduction
Coral reef resilience is strongly influenced by microbial communities associated with diverse benthic substrates.
However, microbiomes beyond corals remain poorly characterized in the Indian Ocean.
This study provides the first cross-substrate microbial baseline from Palk Bay, southeast India.
Methods
We used 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing to characterize bacterial communities associated with corals, crustose coralline algae (CCA), rubble, sediments, and seawater.
Alpha and beta diversity metrics, taxonomic composition, and genus-level co-occurrence network analyses were performed to compare microbial assemblages across substrates.
Results
Bacterial alpha diversity was broadly similar among substrates, whereas beta diversity showed strong compositional segregation (PERMANOVA, Bray–Curtis:
F
= 5.
35,
R²
= 0.
742,
p
= 0.
001).
Each substrate harbored distinct microbial assemblages.
Corals displayed host-linked signatures (e.
g.
,
Favia
enriched in
Ruegeria
), sediments were dominated by
Woeseia
and
Desulfovibrio
, seawater by pelagic taxa (
Pelagibacterales
,
Synechococcus
), and CCA by
Rhodobacteraceae
members (
Roseospira
,
Labrenzia
,
Ruegeria
).
CCA-associated
Rhodobacteraceae
, known to produce larval settlement inducers, suggest a potential role in coral recruitment.
Environmental substrates, particularly sediment and rubble, contained the highest number of unique genera, indicating their function as microbial reservoirs.
Only a few generalist taxa, notably
Pelagibius
, were shared across all substrates.
Network analysis identified CCA as a highly connected node within the benthic microbial community.
Discussion
These findings demonstrate that reef microbial communities are strongly substrate-specific rather than defined by a conserved core microbiome.
The results establish a regional microbial baseline for Indian reefs and highlight the ecological significance of CCA-associated microbial assemblages in supporting reef resilience and potential coral recruitment processes.
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