Identificador persistente para citar o vincular este elemento: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/113553
Título: Microbiomes associated with cultures of Gambierdiscus australes and Ostreopsis cf. ovata, two epibenthic dinoflagellates from the NE Atlantic Ocean (Las Palmas, Gran Canaria)
Autores/as: Denaro, Renata
Crisafi, Francesca
Smedile, Francesco
Soprano, Vittorio
Rossi, Rachele
Zingone, Adriana
Acosta Arbelo, Félix Antonio 
Giacobbe, Maria Grazia
Clasificación UNESCO: 241707 Algología (ficología)
310905 Microbiología
Palabras clave: 16S rDNA bacterial diversity
Algae
Dinoflagellates
Microbial structure
Phycosphere
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Proyectos: Seguimiento, control y mitigación de proliferaciones de organismos marinos asociadas a perturbaciones humanas y cambio climático en la Región Macaronésica 
Publicación seriada: Marine Ecology 
Resumen: Our study focuses on bacterial communities associated with two benthic, epiphytic dinoflagellates, Gambierdiscus australes and Ostreopsis cf. ovata, isolated from coastal waters of Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, and grown in clonal cultures. The goal was to characterize the stable bacterial consortia found within the phycosphere of each dinoflagellate species and establish into which functional group they fell. High-throughput sequencing (HTS) results highlighted a higher bacterial diversity in O. ovata compared with G. australes. Alphaproteobacteria dominated in both dinoflagellates with Marivita and Labrenzia as the most represented OTUs in Ostreopsis and Gambierdiscus, respectively, and Thalassospira and Oceanicaulis well represented in both species. Based on SIMPER analyses, Labrenzia and the Phycispherales SM1A02, dominant in Gambierdiscus and Ostreopsis, respectively, accounted for the most significant difference between the two microbiomes. The microbiomes described here differed from those described for the same dinoflagellate species in other studies, which could depend on differences in environmental conditions, macroalgal substrate, and/or growth stage or bloom phase of the microalgal hosts. The distinct bacterial communities associated with the two potentially toxic dinoflagellates, isolated from the same site and sampling event and cultivated under the same conditions, suggest different modalities of interaction and interexchange between bacteria and their hosts.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/113553
ISSN: 0173-9565
DOI: 10.1111/maec.12699
Fuente: Marine Ecology [ISSN 0173-9565], e12699, v. 43(2), e12699, (Abril 2022)
Colección:Artículos
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