Published January 4, 2021 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Bacterial epibiont communities of panmictic Antarctic krill are spatially structured

  • 1. University of Tasmania
  • 2. Australian Antarctic Division
  • 3. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

Description

Antarctic krill (Euphausia superba) are amongst the most abundant animals on Earth, with a circumpolar distribution in the Southern Ocean. Genetic and genomic studies have failed to detect any population structure for the species, suggesting a single panmictic population. However, the hyper-abundance of krill slows the rate of genetic differentiation, masking potential underlying structure. Here we use high-throughput sequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA genes to show that krill bacterial epibiont communities exhibit spatial structuring, driven mainly by distance rather than environmental factors, especially for strongly krill-associated bacteria. Estimating the ecological processes driving bacterial community turnover indicated this was driven by bacterial dispersal limitation increasing with geographic distance. Furthermore, divergent epibiont communities generated from a single krill swarm split between aquarium tanks under near identical conditions suggests physical isolation in itself can cause krill-associated bacterial communities to diverge. Our findings show that Antarctic krill-associated bacterial communities are geographically structured, in direct contrast with the lack of structure observed for krill genetic and genomic data.

Files

KMB_moult_swab_map.txt

Files (2.3 MB)

Name Size Download all
md5:68f0c7b02c69ea4fcc295bb1a07e4ded
20.8 kB Preview Download
md5:723bcb8f898b5fc802bf5db8772b83bd
2.3 MB Preview Download