Diversity of gut microbiomes in marine fishes is shaped by host-related factors

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Abstract

Microorganisms in the gastrointestinal tract of animals play vital roles in food digestion, homeostasis and immune response regulation. Globally, there are 33,700 fish species, representing almost half of all vertebrate diversity and a wide range of physiologies, ecologies and life histories. To investigate gut microbiomes with high coverage, we performed 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing with 115 samples of 20 common marine fish species. The fish gut microbiome is a remarkably simple community with low microbial diversity (a maximum of 300 amplicon sequence variants only) and has up to 70% of unknown species in some fish species. The gut microbial community structure was significantly shaped by the combined influence of host-associated factors, including the fish taxon (p

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Huang, Q., Sham, R. C., Deng, Y., Mao, Y., Wang, C., Zhang, T., & Leung, K. M. Y. (2020). Diversity of gut microbiomes in marine fishes is shaped by host-related factors. Molecular Ecology, 29(24), 5019–5034. https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15699

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