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Host-Specific Spatial and Temporal Variation in Culturable Gut Bacterial Communities of Dragonflies


Affiliations
1 National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, GKVK, Bellary Road, Bengaluru 560 065, India
 

Many microbial communities are associated with specific animal hosts, with major impacts on the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of both partners. We analysed gut microbial communities of eight dragonfly species in southern India. Adult dragonflies are generalist opportunistic predators; thus, we expected to find relatively high individual variation but low host-specific variation in their gut community composition. However, we find that each host species has a distinct gut bacterial community, with sampling location and month playing a small but significant role in shaping community structure. These patterns suggest that dragonflies either specialize on subsets of available prey, or their guts impose differential selective pressures resulting in distinct communities.

Keywords

Community Richness and Dynamics, Dragonfly, Gut Microbial Communities, Host–Microbe Interaction.
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  • Host-Specific Spatial and Temporal Variation in Culturable Gut Bacterial Communities of Dragonflies

Abstract Views: 358  |  PDF Views: 141

Authors

Ashwin Nair
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, GKVK, Bellary Road, Bengaluru 560 065, India
Deepa Agashe
National Centre for Biological Sciences, Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, GKVK, Bellary Road, Bengaluru 560 065, India

Abstract


Many microbial communities are associated with specific animal hosts, with major impacts on the ecological and evolutionary dynamics of both partners. We analysed gut microbial communities of eight dragonfly species in southern India. Adult dragonflies are generalist opportunistic predators; thus, we expected to find relatively high individual variation but low host-specific variation in their gut community composition. However, we find that each host species has a distinct gut bacterial community, with sampling location and month playing a small but significant role in shaping community structure. These patterns suggest that dragonflies either specialize on subsets of available prey, or their guts impose differential selective pressures resulting in distinct communities.

Keywords


Community Richness and Dynamics, Dragonfly, Gut Microbial Communities, Host–Microbe Interaction.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.18520/cs%2Fv110%2Fi8%2F1513-1523