Data and scripts from: Microbiome composition is shaped by geography and population structure in the parasitic wasp Asobara japonica, but not in the presence of the endosymbiont Wolbachia
The microbial community composition is crucial for diverse life-history traits in many organisms. However, we still lack a sufficient understanding of how the host microbiome is acquired and maintained, a pressing issue in times of global environmental change. Here we investigated to what extent hos...
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Zusammenfassung: | The microbial community composition is crucial for diverse life-history
traits in many organisms. However, we still lack
a sufficient understanding of how the host microbiome is acquired and
maintained, a pressing issue in times of global environmental change. Here
we investigated to what extent host genotype, environmental conditions,
and the endosymbiont Wolbachia influence the bacterial communities in the
parasitic wasp Asobara japonica. We sampled multiple wasp populations
across ten locations in their natural distribution range in Japan and
sequenced the host genome (whole genome sequencing) and microbiome (16S
rRNA gene). We compared the host population structure and bacterial
community composition of wasps that reproduce sexually and are uninfected
with Wolbachia with wasps that reproduce asexually and carry Wolbachia.
The bacterial communities in asexual wasps were highly similar due to a
strong effect of Wolbachia rather than host genomic structure. In
contrast, in sexual wasps, bacterial communities appear primarily shaped
by a combination of population structure and environmental conditions. Our
research highlights that multiple factors shape the bacterial communities
of an organism and that the presence of a single endosymbiont can strongly
alter their compositions. This information is crucial to understanding how
organisms and their associated microbiome will react in the face of
environmental change. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.h9w0vt4mp |