The Microbiome of an Invasive Antarctic insect, Eretmoptera Murphyi (Diptera: Chironomidae), and its Potential Role in Nutrient Cycling
Octavia D. M. Brayley, Kirsty McCready, Shengwei Liu, Peter Convey, Yin Chen, Sami Ullah, Nicholas Teets, Scott A.L. Hayward

TL;DR
This paper studies the microbiome of an invasive Antarctic insect and its possible role in boosting soil nutrients.
Contribution
The study is the first to characterize the microbiome of Eretmoptera murphyi and compare it to other Antarctic invertebrates.
Findings
Eretmoptera murphyi's microbiome is more diverse than that of other Antarctic invertebrates.
The microbiome includes microorganisms potentially involved in nutrient cycling.
Some phyla found in the microbiome have not been previously reported in Antarctic soils.
Abstract
Eretmoptera murphyi Schaeffer 1914 is a flightless chironomid midge endemic to South Georgia in the sub-Antarctic. In the 1960s it was accidentally introduced to Signy Island (in the more extreme maritime Antarctic), where it is now considered an invasive species. Detritivorous E. murphyi larvae can increase soil nitrogen levels by up to five times compared with similar uncolonized substrates, although the mechanisms involved remain unknown. This study conducted the first larval microbiome characterisation of E. murphyi, with the aim of identifying groups of microorganisms that may contribute to the elevated nutrient availability associated with this species. We also compare the E. murphyi microbiome with information available for other Antarctic invertebrates. Dominant archaea and bacteria included Crenarchaeota, Actinobacteriota, Chloroflexi, Proteobacteria and Planctomycetota, many…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolar Research and Ecology · Insect symbiosis and bacterial influences · Physiological and biochemical adaptations
