# A community perspective on the concept of marine holobionts:   state-of-the-art, challenges, and future directions

**Authors:** Simon Dittami (LBI2M), Enrique Arboleda (SBR), Jean-Christophe Auguet, (UMR MARBEC), Arite Bigalke, Enora Briand (IFREMER Nantes), Paco C\'ardenas,, Ulisse Cardini, Johan Decelle, Ashwin Engelen (CCMAR), Damien Eveillard, (LS2N), Claire Gachon, Sarah Griffiths, Tilmann Harder, Ehsan Kayal (FR2424),, Elena Kazamia (IBENS), Fran\c{c}ois Lallier (ABICE), M\'onica Medina (PSU),, Ezequiel Marzinelli (SCELSE, USIMS), Teresa Morganti, Laura Pons, Soizic, Prado (MCAM), Jos\'e Pintado Valverde, Mahasweta Saha, Marc-Andre Selosse, (OSEB), Derek Skillings, Willem Stock, Shinichi Sunagawa, Eve Toulza (IHPE),, Alexey Vorobev (CEA), Catherine Leblanc (LBI2M), Fabrice Not

arXiv: 1907.05017 · 2019-07-12

## TL;DR

This paper reviews the current state, challenges, and future directions of marine holobiont research, emphasizing the importance of host-microbe interactions in marine ecosystems and the need for integrated community efforts.

## Contribution

It provides a comprehensive overview of marine holobiont concepts, identifies key challenges, and discusses future research opportunities and technological needs in the field.

## Key findings

- Marine holobionts are crucial for understanding ecological and evolutionary processes.
- Bridging model systems and global approaches is a major challenge.
- Community collaboration is essential for advancing marine holobiont research.

## Abstract

Host-microbe interactions play crucial roles in marine ecosystems, but we still have very little understanding of the mechanisms that govern these relationships, the evolutionary processes that shape them, and their ecological consequences. The holobiont concept is a renewed paradigm in biology that can help describe and understand these complex systems. It posits that a host and its associated microbiota, living together in a long-lasting relationship, form the holobiont, and have to be studied together, as a coherent biological and functional unit, in order to understand the biology, ecology and evolution of the organisms. Here we discuss critical concepts and opportunities in marine holobiont research and identify key challenges in the field. We highlight the potential economic, sociological, and environmental impacts of the holobiont concept in marine biological, evolutionary, and environmental sciences with comparisons to terrestrial science whenever appropriate. A deeper understanding of such complex systems, however, will require further technological and conceptual advances. The most significant challenge will be to bridge functional research on simple and tractable model systems and global approaches. This will require scientists to work together as an (inter)active community in order to address, for instance, ecological and evolutionary questions and the roles of holobionts in biogeochemical cycles.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1907.05017