Reciprocal transplantation experiments reveal local adaptation of seaweed-associated bacteria
Shauna Corr, Chris Lowe, Michiel Vos

TL;DR
This study shows that bacteria associated with seaweeds perform better on their native host, suggesting local adaptation.
Contribution
The study demonstrates local adaptation of seaweed-associated bacteria using reciprocal transplant experiments.
Findings
Bacterial isolates from Palmaria palmata and Fucus serratus show higher fitness in media from their native host.
Host-derived agar outperformed generic marine agar in culturing seaweed-associated bacteria.
Locally adapted bacteria outcompeted non-native isolates in their native environment.
Abstract
Seaweed microbiomes are diverse and frequently species-specific. By actively attracting and repelling settling bacteria through exuded metabolites, seaweeds are thought to exert a strong selective pressure on their microbiomes. However, to what degree seaweed-associated bacteria are adapted to their host has received little attention. Here, we retrieve cultivable seaweed bacterial communities from Palmaria palmata (Dulse) and Fucus serratus (Serrated Wrack) and use reciprocal transplant experiments to test whether bacterial isolates have the greatest fitness on their host seaweed species. We used agar derived from host seaweed extracts for bacterial isolation, which was found to be superior to a generic marine agar formulation based on both 16S rRNA gene amplicon alpha- and beta-diversity comparisons to uncultured samples. We then demonstrate that bacterial isolates from both seaweed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMarine and coastal plant biology · Seaweed-derived Bioactive Compounds · Microbial Community Ecology and Physiology
