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Marine cyanolichens from different littoral zones are associated with distinct bacterial communities / Nyree J. West in PeerJ, n°6 (Année 2018)
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Titre : Marine cyanolichens from different littoral zones are associated with distinct bacterial communities Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Nyree J. West, Auteur ; Delphine Parrot, Auteur ; Claire Fayet, Auteur ; Martin Grube, Auteur ; Sophie Tomasi, Auteur ; Marcelino T. Suzuki, Auteur Année de publication : 2018 Article en page(s) : e5208 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [ZG] Autriche
[ZG] ERQUY (22054)
[ZG] France
[habitats/milieux] 1 - Habitats littoraux et halophile
[Thèmes] LichensMots-clés : cyanolichen marin symbiose ARN ribosomique 16S (ARNr 16S) Résumé : "he microbial diversity and function of terrestrial lichens have been well studied, but knowledge about the non-photosynthetic bacteria associated with marine lichens is still scarce. 16S rRNA gene Illumina sequencing was used to assess the culture-independent bacterial diversity in the strictly marine cyanolichen species Lichina pygmaea and Lichina confinis, and the maritime chlorolichen species Xanthoria aureola which occupy different areas on the littoral zone. Inland terrestrial cyanolichens from Austria were also analysed as for the marine lichens to examine further the impact of habitat/lichen species on the associated bacterial communities. The L. confinis and L. pygmaea communities were significantly different from those of the maritime Xanthoria aureola lichen found higher up on the littoral zone and these latter communities were more similar to those of the inland terrestrial lichens. The strictly marine lichens were dominated by the Bacteroidetes phylum accounting for 50% of the sequences, whereas Alphaproteobacteria, notably Sphingomonas, dominated the maritime and the inland terrestrial lichens. Bacterial communities associated with the two Lichina species were significantly different sharing only 33 core OTUs, half of which were affiliated to the Bacteroidetes genera Rubricoccus, Tunicatimonas and Lewinella, suggesting an important role of these species in the marine Lichina lichen symbiosis. Marine cyanolichens showed a higher abundance of OTUs likely affiliated to moderately thermophilic and/or radiation resistant bacteria belonging to the Phyla Chloroflexi, Thermi, and the families Rhodothermaceae and Rubrobacteraceae when compared to those of inland terrestrial lichens. This most likely reflects the exposed and highly variable conditions to which they are subjected daily." (source : auteurs) Type de publication : périodique Référence biblio : West N., Parrot D., Fayet C., Grube M., Tomasi S., Suzuki M., 2018 - Marine cyanolichens from different littoral zones are associated with distinct bacterial communities. PeerJ, 6 : e5208. ID PMB : 68688 En ligne : https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/0bc3/c452df1aa9d5a534d440109fec233e9fef88.pdf?_ [...] Format de la ressource électronique : document Permalink : http://www.cbnbrest.fr/catalogue_en_ligne/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=68688
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