Gut microbes of wood-eating Panaqolus and Panaque

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bekateen
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Gut microbes of wood-eating Panaqolus and Panaque

Post by bekateen »

Mark McCauley Donovan P. German Nathan K. Lujan Colin R. Jackson. (2020). Gut microbiomes of sympatric Amazonian wood‐eating catfishes (Loricariidae) reflect host identity and little role in wood digestion. Ecology and Evolution. First published: 25 May 2020. https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.6413

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/ful ... /ece3.6413
Abstract
Neotropical wood‐eating catfishes (family Loricariidae) can occur in diverse assemblages with multiple genera and species feeding on the same woody detritus. As such, they present an intriguing system in which to examine the influence of host species identity on the vertebrate gut microbiome as well as to determine the potential role of gut bacteria in wood digestion. We characterized the gut microbiome of two co‐occurring catfish genera and four species: , , , and , as well as that of submerged wood on which they feed. The gut bacterial community did not significantly vary across three gut regions (proximal, mid, distal) for any catfish species, although interspecific variation in the gut microbiome was significant, with magnitude of interspecific difference generally reflecting host phylogenetic proximity. Further, the gut microbiome of each species was significantly different to that present on the submerged wood. Inferring the genomic potential of the gut microbiome revealed that the majority of wood digesting pathways were at best equivalent to and more often depleted or nonexistent within the catfish gut compared to the submerged wood, suggesting a minimal role for the gut microbiome in wood digestion. Rather, these fishes are more likely reliant on fiber degradation performed by microbes in the environment, with their gut microbiome determined more by host identity and phylogenetic history.
Inferring the genomic potential of the gut microbiome revealed that the majority of wood digesting pathways were at best equivalent to and more often depleted or nonexistent within the catfish gut compared to the submerged wood, suggesting a minimal role for the gut microbiome in wood digestion. Rather, these fishes are more likely reliant on fiber degradation performed by microbes in the environment, with their gut microbiome determined more by host identity and phylogenetic history.
This is where it gets interesting. Rotten wood may be the way to go.
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Bas Pels
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Re: Gut microbes of wood-eating Panaqolus and Panaque

Post by Bas Pels »

Putting it in my own words, these fishes live from the rotting bacteria, not from the wood itself.

Or would this be to bold to state?
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Re: Gut microbes of wood-eating Panaqolus and Panaque

Post by dw1305 »

Hi all,
Bas Pels wrote: 26 May 2020, 07:34Putting it in my own words, these fishes live from the rotting bacteria, not from the wood itself. Or would this be to bold to state?
No, I think that is right.

We have a bit of thread on this, starting in 2010 with <Little Panaque soon......>, via <Teeth degradation in Panaque>, from 2013 (which we both contributed too) and <Nitrogen fixing bacteria in the gut .......>.

There is also some discussion in <Mustard spot......>.

McDonald et al. published in <The effect of diet on the enteric microbiome.......>, and comments on this are here: <Panaque nigrolineatus gut flora >.

cheers Darrel
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