Intertidal Warming Causes Mortality and Disrupts the Microbiome of Oysters
Elliot Scanes, Nachshon Siboni, Maquel Brandimarti, Justin Seymour

TL;DR
Intertidal warming increases oyster mortality and changes their microbiome, promoting harmful Vibrio bacteria.
Contribution
Demonstrates that small temperature increases disrupt oyster microbiomes and increase mortality through field experiments.
Findings
Oysters on black tiles had 50% higher mortality than those on white tiles.
Oysters on black tiles showed increased Vibrio bacteria, including V. harveyi and V. parahaemolyticus.
Temperature differences of up to 3°C caused significant microbiome shifts and mortality.
Abstract
Intertidal ecosystems are physically stressful habitats, with resident organisms often living close to their limits. These limits include the balance between host organisms and microbial partners; a balance that may be tipped by climate change. We simulated intertidal warming in the field by establishing populations of the Sydney rock oyster, Saccostrea glomerata, on black and white concrete tiles, resulting in differing thermal conditions. Tiles were placed on the intertidal shoreline among natural oyster populations. Oysters on black tiles were up to 3°C warmer than those on white tiles during low tide. We monitored the tiles for oyster survival and took gill and haemolymph samples from oysters for microbiological analysis using qPCR, 16S, and HSP60 rRNA sequencing. We found that after six days, levels of oyster mortality were 50% greater on the black tiles. Oysters on black tiles…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine Bivalve and Aquaculture Studies · Ocean Acidification Effects and Responses
