Chava L. Weitzman, Kimberley Day, Karen Gibb, Gregory P. Brown, Angga Rachmansah, Keith Christian
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Unravelling Intrinsic and Extrinsic Factors Shaping the Rich Communities on Lizard Skin
Geckos have high skin bacterial diversity, even though gecko skin has antimicrobial, self-cleaning properties. To gain a better understanding of environment–animal–microbiome interactions in these reptiles, we investigated skin bacteria on seven northern Australian gecko species from five sites and two seasons (n = 234) and found support for our hypotheses of divergent communities between species, sites and seasons. Despite that support, predictor variables had low explanatory power, which increased when focusing within a site or species, explaining up to 40% and 27% of the variation among samples at a site or on a species found in multiple sites, respectively. Weather explained even less variation, as temperature and rainfall did not account for site and season differences. Low explanatory power of these variables indicates that additional factors, or stochasticity, explain much of the bacterial assemblage on geckos. Next, research is needed to determine if these low-biomass communities represent living symbionts. If so, assessing functional similarities, rather than taxonomic profiling, would clarify if bacterial communities have interactive roles with gecko hosts or represent short-lived environmental hitch-hikers and relic DNA.
期刊介绍:
The journal is identical in scope to Environmental Microbiology, shares the same editorial team and submission site, and will apply the same high level acceptance criteria. The two journals will be mutually supportive and evolve side-by-side.
Environmental Microbiology Reports provides a high profile vehicle for publication of the most innovative, original and rigorous research in the field. The scope of the Journal encompasses the diversity of current research on microbial processes in the environment, microbial communities, interactions and evolution and includes, but is not limited to, the following:
the structure, activities and communal behaviour of microbial communities
microbial community genetics and evolutionary processes
microbial symbioses, microbial interactions and interactions with plants, animals and abiotic factors
microbes in the tree of life, microbial diversification and evolution
population biology and clonal structure
microbial metabolic and structural diversity
microbial physiology, growth and survival
microbes and surfaces, adhesion and biofouling
responses to environmental signals and stress factors
modelling and theory development
pollution microbiology
extremophiles and life in extreme and unusual little-explored habitats
element cycles and biogeochemical processes, primary and secondary production
microbes in a changing world, microbially-influenced global changes
evolution and diversity of archaeal and bacterial viruses
new technological developments in microbial ecology and evolution, in particular for the study of activities of microbial communities, non-culturable microorganisms and emerging pathogens.