Ecological filtering drives rapid spatiotemporal dynamics in fish skin
microbiomes
Abstract
Skin microbiomes provide vital functions, yet knowledge about their
species assemblages is limited - especially for non-model organisms. In
this study, we conducted in situ manipulations and repeated sampling on
wild-caught individuals of Rutilus rutilus. Treatments included
translocation between fresh and brackish water habitats to investigate
the role of environment; community rebooting by disinfection to infer
host-microbe interactions; and housing in pairs to study the role of
inter-host dispersal for the structure of microbiomes colonizing
animals. Results revealed that fish skin microbiomes were biodiversity
hotspots with highly dynamic composition that were distinct from
bacterioplankton communities. External environmental conditions and
individual-specific factors jointly determined the
colonization-extinction dynamics, whereas inter-host dispersal had
negligible effects. The dynamics of the microbiome composition was
seemingly non-affected by reboot treatment, pointing to high resilience
to disturbance in these microbial communities. Together, the
manipulations demonstrate that host individual characteristics and
environment interactively shapes the skin microbiome of fish. The
results emphasize the role of inter-individual variability for the
unexplained variation found in many host-microbiome systems, although
the mechanistic underpinnings remain to be identified.