Dataset

Coral-associated bacteria demonstrate phylosymbiosis and cophylogeny

OBIS Secretariat Open in mapper Explore occurrences

Scleractinian corals microbial symbionts influence host health, yet how these coral microbiomes assembled over evolution is not well understood. We survey bacterial and archaeal communities in phylogenetically diverse Australian corals representing more than 425 million years of diversification. We show that corals exhibit anatomical compartmentalization of the microbiome such that the coral surface mucus layer, tissue, and skeleton microbiomes show distinct modern microbial ecology and evolutionary assembly. In corals, these compartments differ greatly in microbial community composition, richness, and response to host vs. environmental drivers. We also find evidence of coral-microbe phylosymbiosis, in which coral microbiome composition and richness reflects coral phylogeny. Surprisingly, the coral skeleton represents the most biodiverse coral microbiome, and also shows the strongest evidence of phylosymbiosis. Together these results trace microbial symbiosis across anatomy during the evolution of a basal animal lineage.

Published: September 20, 2022 at 12:42

License: This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC-BY) 4.0 License

URL: https://hosted-datasets.gbif.org/mgnify/MGYS00005318.zip

Contacts:

Penn State University
Penn State University

126,223
occurrence records
1,321
taxa
97
species

Taxa

Missing and invalid fields

Field Missing Invalid
coordinateUncertaintyInMeters 126,223
100.0%
maximumDepthInMeters 705
0.6%
minimumDepthInMeters 705
0.6%
occurrenceStatus 126,223
100.0%
scientificNameID 126,223
100.0%

Quality flags

The OBIS data quality flags are documented at https://github.com/iobis/obis-qc.

Flag Dropped Records
NO_MATCH 41,991
33.3%
MARINE_UNSURE 14,278
11.3%
NO_DEPTH 705
0.6%
NOT_MARINE 550
0.4%
ON_LAND 454
0.4%
WORMS_ANNOTATION_UNRESOLVABLE 341
0.3%
NO_ACCEPTED_NAME 162
0.1%

Measurement types

DNA derived data