Published September 13, 2023 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Bacterial 16s rRNA gene amplicon data (V3-V4) and qPCR data

  • 1. Aarhus University

Description

Within a given species, considerable inter-individual, spatial, and temporal variation in the composition of the host microbiome exists. In group-living animals, social interactions homogenize microbiome composition among group members, nevertheless, divergence in microbiome composition among related groups arises. Such variation can result from deterministic and stochastic processes. Stochastic changes, or ecological drift, can occur among symbionts with potential for colonizing a host and within individual hosts, and drive divergence in microbiome composition among hosts or host groups. We tested whether ecological drift associated with dispersal and foundation of new groups cause divergence in microbiome composition between natal and newly formed groups in the social spider Stegodyphus dumicola. We simulated initiation of new groups and compared variation in microbiome composition among and within groups. Theory predicts a decrease in beta diversity with increasing group size, and we found that single founders harboured the highest diversity. Divergence in microbiome composition from the natal nest was mainly driven by a higher number of non-core symbionts. This suggests that stochastic divergence in host microbiomes can arise during the process of group formation by individual founders, which could explain the existence of among-group variation in microbiome composition in the wild. Consistent host-symbiont relationships in the species must then be maintained by other processes. Individual founders harboured higher relative abundances of non-core symbionts some of which are possible pathogens, compared with founders in small groups. These symbionts vary in occurrence with group size, indicating that group dynamics influence various core and non-core symbionts differently.

Files

README.md

Files (397.8 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:c06632e0f1078da8a8520d3f9455e6f6
923 Bytes Preview Download
md5:118d4d1ee73347ba2acaba82c98002c8
396.8 kB Download