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Temporal, Environmental, and Biological Drivers of the Mucosal Microbiome in a Wild Marine Fish, Scomber japonicus

Jeremiah J. Minich, Semar Petrus, Julius D. Michael, Todd P. Michael, Rob Knight, Eric E. Allen

2020mSphere96 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

, are one of the largest and most economically important fisheries in the world. The fish is harvested for both human consumption and fish meal. Changing ocean conditions driven by anthropogenic stressors like climate change may negatively impact fisheries. One mechanism for this is through disease. As waters warm and chemistry changes, the microbial communities associated with fish may change. In this study, we performed a holistic analysis of all mucosal sites on the fish over a 1-year time series to explore seasonal variation and to understand the environmental drivers of the microbiome. Understanding seasonality in the fish microbiome is also applicable to aquaculture production for producers to better understand and predict when disease outbreaks may occur based on changing environmental conditions in the ocean.

Topics & Concepts

ScomberMicrobiomeFish <Actinopterygii>FisheryBiologyZoologyBioinformaticsMackerelAquaculture disease management and microbiotaAquaculture Nutrition and GrowthGut microbiota and health
Temporal, Environmental, and Biological Drivers of the Mucosal Microbiome in a Wild Marine Fish, Scomber japonicus | Litcius