Journal article
Diversity and stability of coral endolithic microbial communities at a naturally high pCO2 reef
VR Marcelino, KM Morrow, MJH van Oppen, DG Bourne, H Verbruggen
Molecular Ecology | WILEY | Published : 2017
DOI: 10.1111/mec.14268
Abstract
The health and functioning of reef-building corals is dependent on a balanced association with prokaryotic and eukaryotic microbes. The coral skeleton harbours numerous endolithic microbes, but their diversity, ecological roles and responses to environmental stress, including ocean acidification (OA), are not well characterized. This study tests whether pH affects the diversity and structure of prokaryotic and eukaryotic algal communities associated with skeletons of Porites spp. using targeted amplicon (16S rRNA gene, UPA and tufA) sequencing. We found that the composition of endolithic communities in the massive coral Porites spp. inhabiting a naturally high pCO2 reef (avg. pCO2 811 μatm) ..
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Grants
Awarded by Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment
Funding Acknowledgements
Australian Biological Resources Study, Grant/Award Number: RFL213-08; Australian Research Council, Grant/Award Number: FT110100585, DP150100705; Holsworth Wildlife Research Endowment; Albert Shimmins Fund; University of Melbourne; Melbourne Bioinformatics, Grant/Award Number: UOM0007; Nectar Research Cloud