Capacity of deep-sea corals to obtain nutrition from cold seeps aligned with microbiome reorganization
Name:
Global Change Biology - 2022 - Osman - Capacity of deep‐sea corals to obtain nutrition from cold seeps aligned with.pdf
Size:
7.068Mb
Format:
PDF
Description:
Published Version
Name:
New Compressed (zipped) Folder (63).zip
Size:
899.3Kb
Format:
application/zip
Description:
Supplementary material
Type
ArticleAuthors
Osman, Eslam O.
Vohsen, Samuel A

Girard, Fanny

Cruz, Rafaelina
Glickman, Orli
Bullock, Lena M
Anderson, Kaitlin E
Weinnig, Alexis M

Cordes, Erik E

Fisher, Charles R
Baums, Iliana B

KAUST Department
Red Sea Research Center (RSRC)Biological and Environmental Science and Engineering (BESE) Division
Date
2022-10-21Permanent link to this record
http://hdl.handle.net/10754/685114
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Cold seeps in the deep sea harbor various animals that have adapted to utilize seepage chemicals with the aid of chemosynthetic microbes that serve as primary producers. Corals are among the animals that live near seep habitats and yet, there is a lack of evidence that corals gain benefits and/or incur costs from cold seeps. Here, we focused on Callogorgia delta and Paramuricea sp. type B3 that live near and far from visual signs of currently active seepage at five sites in the deep Gulf of Mexico. We tested whether these corals rely on chemosynthetically-derived food in seep habitats and how the proximity to cold seeps may influence; (i) coral colony traits (i.e., health status, growth rate, regrowth after sampling, and branch loss) and associated epifauna, (ii) associated microbiome, and (iii) host transcriptomes. Stable isotope data showed that many coral colonies utilized chemosynthetically derived food, but the feeding strategy differed by coral species. The microbiome composition of C. delta, unlike Paramuricea sp., varied significantly between seep and non-seep colonies and both coral species were associated with various sulfur-oxidizing bacteria (SUP05). Interestingly, the relative abundances of SUP05 varied among seep and non-seep colonies and were strongly correlated with carbon and nitrogen stable isotope values. In contrast, the proximity to cold seeps did not have a measurable effect on gene expression, colony traits, or associated epifauna in coral species. Our work provides the first evidence that some corals may gain benefits from living near cold seeps with apparently limited costs to the colonies. Cold seeps provide not only hard substrate but also food to cold-water corals. Furthermore, restructuring of the microbiome communities (particularly SUP05) is likely the key adaptive process to aid corals in utilizing seepage-derived carbon. This highlights that those deep-sea corals may upregulate particular microbial symbiont communities to cope with environmental gradients.Citation
Osman, E. O., Vohsen, S. A., Girard, F., Cruz, R., Glickman, O., Bullock, L. M., Anderson, K. E., Weinnig, A. M., Cordes, E. E., Fisher, C. R., & Baums, I. B. (2022). Capacity of deep-sea corals to obtain nutrition from cold seeps aligned with microbiome reorganization. Global Change Biology. Portico. https://doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16447Sponsors
The authors thank ECOGIG for the funding. Special thanks to Kelsey Rogers and Jeff Chanton for providing stable isotope data of sediments. The authors also thank the operation team of EV Nautilus and ROV Hercules, Ocean Inspector, and ROV Global Explorer. This is contribution no. 598 from ECOGIG consortium. This work was primally funded by Ecosystem Impacts of Oil and Gas Inputs to the Gulf (ECOGIG) consortium through the Gulf of Mexico Research Initiative (GOMRI) provided to professors Iliana B. Baums, Erik Cordes, Charles R. Fisher.Publisher
WileyJournal
Global change biologyPubMed ID
36271605Additional Links
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/gcb.16447Relations
Is Supplemented By:- [Software]
Title: Eslam-Osman/Deep-Sea-Microbiome:. Publication Date: 2019-11-04. github: Eslam-Osman/Deep-Sea-Microbiome Handle: 10754/686527
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/gcb.16447
Scopus Count
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Archived with thanks to Global change biology under a Creative Commons license, details at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
Related articles
- Cold Seeps on the Passive Northern U.S. Atlantic Margin Host Globally Representative Members of the Seep Microbiome with Locally Dominant Strains of Archaea.
- Authors: Semler AC, Fortney JL, Fulweiler RW, Dekas AE
- Issue date: 2022 Jun 14
- Hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from Mauritanian Coral Mounds.
- Authors: Gil M, Ramil F, AgÍs JA
- Issue date: 2020 Nov 16
- Culture-independent characterization of bacterial communities associated with the cold-water coral Lophelia pertusa in the northeastern Gulf of Mexico.
- Authors: Kellogg CA, Lisle JT, Galkiewicz JP
- Issue date: 2009 Apr
- Riddles of Lost City: Chemotrophic Prokaryotes Drives Carbon, Sulfur, and Nitrogen Cycling at an Extinct Cold Seep, South China Sea.
- Authors: Chen Y, Lyu Y, Zhang J, Li Q, Lyu L, Zhou Y, Kong J, Zeng X, Zhang S, Li J
- Issue date: 2023 Feb 14
- Microbiomes of stony and soft deep-sea corals share rare core bacteria.
- Authors: Kellogg CA
- Issue date: 2019 Jun 10