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A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island
A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island
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A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island
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A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island
A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island

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A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island
A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island
Journal Article

A Multimarker Approach to Identify Microbial Bioindicators for Coral Reef Health Monitoring—Case Study in La Réunion Island

2024
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Overview
The marine microbiome arouses an increasing interest, aimed at better understanding coral reef biodiversity, coral resilience, and identifying bioindicators of ecosystem health. The present study is a microbiome mining of three environmentally contrasted sites along the Hermitage fringing reef of La Réunion Island (Western Indian Ocean). This mining aims to identify bioindicators of reef health to assist managers in preserving the fringing reefs of La Réunion. The watersheds of the fringing reefs are small, steeply sloped, and are impacted by human activities with significant land use changes and hydrological modifications along the coast and up to mid-altitudes. Sediment, seawater, and coral rubble were sampled in austral summer and winter at each site. For each compartment, bacterial, fungal, microalgal, and protist communities were characterized by high throughput DNA sequencing methodology. Results show that the reef microbiome composition varied greatly with seasons and reef compartments, but variations were different among targeted markers. No significant variation among sites was observed. Relevant bioindicators were highlighted per taxonomic groups such as the Firmicutes:Bacteroidota ratio (8.4%:7.0%), the genera Vibrio (25.2%) and Photobacterium (12.5%) dominating bacteria; the Ascomycota:Basidiomycota ratio (63.1%:36.1%), the genera Aspergillus (40.9%) and Cladosporium (16.2%) dominating fungi; the genus Ostreobium (81.5%) in Chlorophyta taxon for microalgae; and the groups of Dinoflagellata (63.3%) and Diatomea (22.6%) within the protista comprising two dominant genera: Symbiodinium (41.7%) and Pelagodinium (27.8%). This study highlights that the identified bioindicators, mainly in seawater and sediment reef compartments, could be targeted by reef conservation stakeholders to better monitor La Réunion Island’s reef state of health and to improve management plans.