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Evaluating the core microbiota in complex communities: A systematic investigation

Summary The study of complex microbial communities poses unique conceptual and analytical challenges, with microbial species potentially numbering in the thousands. With transient or allochthonous microorganisms often adding to this complexity, a ‘core’ microbiota approach, focusing only on the stab...

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Published in:Environmental microbiology 2017-04, Vol.19 (4), p.1450-1462
Main Authors: Astudillo‐García, Carmen, Bell, James J., Webster, Nicole S., Glasl, Bettina, Jompa, Jamaluddin, Montoya, Jose M., Taylor, Michael W.
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-c4387-4dee01f3ba6641a0bce0104ed0c0af882a6d81e5e60f0ae715e4fc6629bd0e6b3
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container_end_page 1462
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container_title Environmental microbiology
container_volume 19
creator Astudillo‐García, Carmen
Bell, James J.
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description Summary The study of complex microbial communities poses unique conceptual and analytical challenges, with microbial species potentially numbering in the thousands. With transient or allochthonous microorganisms often adding to this complexity, a ‘core’ microbiota approach, focusing only on the stable and permanent members of the community, is becoming increasingly popular. Given the various ways of defining a core microbiota, it is prudent to examine whether the definition of the core impacts upon the results obtained. Here we used complex marine sponge microbiotas and undertook a systematic evaluation of the degree to which different factors used to define the core influenced the conclusions. Significant differences in alpha‐ and beta‐diversity were detected using some but not all core definitions. However, findings related to host specificity and environmental quality were largely insensitive to major changes in the core microbiota definition. Furthermore, none of the applied definitions altered our perception of the ecological networks summarising interactions among bacteria within the sponges. These results suggest that, while care should still be taken in interpretation, the core microbiota approach is surprisingly robust, at least for comparing microbiotas of closely related samples.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/1462-2920.13647
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subjects Animals
Bacteria
Biodiversity and Ecology
Environmental Sciences
Microbiota
Phylogeny
Porifera - microbiology
title Evaluating the core microbiota in complex communities: A systematic investigation
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