Schlyter, Fredrik
- Department of Plant Protection Biology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences
- Czech University of Life Sciences Prague
Research article2020Peer reviewedOpen access
Chakraborty, Amrita; Ashraf, Muhammad Zubair; Modlinger, Roman; Synek, Jiri; Schlyter, Fredrik; Roy, Amit
Bark beetles often serve as forest damaging agents, causing landscape-level mortality. Understanding the biology and ecology of beetles are important for both, gathering knowledge about important forest insects and forest protection. Knowledge about the bark beetle gut-associated bacteria is one of the crucial yet surprisingly neglected areas of research with European tree-killing bark beetles. Hence, in this study, we survey the gut bacteriome from five Ips and one non-Ips bark beetles from Scolytinae. Results reveal 69 core bacterial genera among five Ips beetles that may perform conserved functions within the bark beetle holobiont. The most abundant bacterial genera from different bark beetle gut include Erwinia, Sodalis, Serratia, Tyzzerella, Raoultella, Rahnella, Wolbachia, Spiroplasma, Vibrio, and Pseudoxanthomonas. Notable differences in gut-associated bacterial community richness and diversity among the beetle species are observed. Furthermore, the impact of sampling location on the overall bark beetle gut bacterial community assemblage is also documented, which warrants further investigations. Nevertheless, our data expanded the current knowledge about core gut bacterial communities in Ips bark beetles and their putative function such as cellulose degradation, nitrogen fixation, detoxification of defensive plant compounds, and inhibition of pathogens, which could serve as a basis for further metatranscriptomics and metaproteomics investigations.
Scientific Reports
2020, volume: 10, number: 1, article number: 18572
Publisher: NATURE RESEARCH
SLU Plant Protection Network
Ecology
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/109304