The effect of environmental variation on the diversity and composition of the three-spined stickleback microbiome
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The fish skin microbiome serves as a protective barrier, influencing host health and facilitating interactions between the host and its environment. While several studies have characterised the composition and roles of the fish skin microbiome, there remains a paucity of data on how environmental variation influences these microbes in natural populations. Here, we used 16S rRNA gene sequencing to characterise the skin microbiome of wild three-spined stickleback populations and examine how environmental factors influence microbial diversity and community composition across 17 freshwater lochs on the island of North Uist, Scotland. Analysis of 239 samples revealed a set of dominant bacterial genera commonly associated with other fish species, including Janthinobacterium , Pseudomonas , Acinetobacter , and Psychrobacter, that constituted a core skin microbiota across lochs. Microbiome composition was primarily shaped by environmental variables, particularly habitat, water pH, conductivity, and metal concentrations, with pH emerging as a key driver of community structure. Host sex also influenced microbiome variation, with several taxa differing in relative abundance between males and females. Alpha-diversity was higher among stickleback fish from lochs with a neutral pH compared with those from alkaline and acidic environments. Differential abundance analyses identified 27 and 24 amplicon sequence variants (ASVs), respectfully, associated with variations in pH and host sex, including members of Psychrobacter, Sphingobacterium , Carnobacterium , Chryseobacterium , and Arthrobacter , highlighting the combined influence of environmental and host factors on microbiome composition in wild fish populations in freshwater environments.