Ecology and population structure of Vibrionaceae in the coastal ocean
Ecology and population structure of Vibrionaceae in the coastal ocean
Date
2010-02
Authors
Preheim, Sarah P.
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DOI
10.1575/1912/4333
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Keywords
Marine microbiology
Microbial diversity
Microbial diversity
Abstract
Extensive genetic diversity has been discovered in the microbial world, yet mechanisms
that shape and maintain this diversity remain poorly understood. This thesis investigates
to what extent populations of the gamma-proteobacterial family, Vibrionaceae, are
ecologically specialized by investigating the distribution across a wide range of
environmental categories, such as marine invertebrates or particles in the water column.
Additionally, it seeks to determine whether in situ population distributions directly result
from a competitive advantage over other Vibrio populations. This was investigated by in
vitro competition assays on mixtures of native, sterilized particles. Generalist populations
were found to dominate the associations with marine invertebrates, consistent with a
model of high migration dominated population assembly. A majority of populations
occurred broadly within and among the different types of invertebrates sampled, with one
population being a near perfect generalist with regard to seasons, host taxa and body
regions. High variability across host individuals, consistent with a scenario of stochastic
clonal expansion, was especially pronounced in crab and zooplankton samples.
Specialization, demonstrated by specific and reproducible association with different
particle types in the water column, is more common than specialization within
invertebrate hosts. Co-existing Vibrio species show strong preferences for different types
of particulate matter in the water column suggesting that competition for limited
resources influences their evolution. While populations show different growth profiles on
particle derived substrates, relative growth advantages of specialist populations in
competition with other Vibrio populations on native particles may not be sufficient to
explain observed environmental distributions. Instead, populations may gain an
advantage on these particles by colonizing the living plant or zooplankton prior to death
and degradation into particulate matter. In summary, although vibrios are known
commensals of marine invertebrates, evidence suggests that population structure within
animals is fairly weak compared to suspended particles in the water column. This
highlights the importance of comparing multiple environmental categories and migration
among them to investigate population structure and adaptation.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole oceanographic Institution February 2010
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Citation
Preheim, S. P. (2010). Ecology and population structure of Vibrionaceae in the coastal ocean [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/4333