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The role of the gut microbiome in sustainable teleost aquaculture.

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TLDR
The influence aquaculture has had on gut microbiome research is demonstrated, while also a road map for the main deterministic forces that influence the gut microbiome is provided, with topical applications to Aquaculture.
Abstract
As the most diverse vertebrate group and a major component of a growing global aquaculture industry, teleosts continue to attract significant scientific attention. The growth in global aquaculture, driven by declines in wild stocks, has provided additional empirical demand, and thus opportunities, to explore teleost diversity. Among key developments is the recent growth in microbiome exploration, facilitated by advances in high-throughput sequencing technologies. Here, we consider studies on teleost gut microbiomes in the context of sustainable aquaculture, which we have discussed in four themes: diet, immunity, artificial selection and closed-loop systems. We demonstrate the influence aquaculture has had on gut microbiome research, while also providing a road map for the main deterministic forces that influence the gut microbiome, with topical applications to aquaculture. Functional significance is considered within an aquaculture context with reference to impacts on nutrition and immunity. Finally, we identify key knowledge gaps, both methodological and conceptual, and propose promising applications of gut microbiome manipulation to aquaculture, and future priorities in microbiome research. These include insect-based feeds, vaccination, mechanism of pro- and prebiotics, artificial selection on the hologenome, in-water bacteriophages in recirculating aquaculture systems (RAS), physiochemical properties of water and dysbiosis as a biomarker.

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Aquaculture industry prospective from gut microbiome of fish and shellfish: An overview.

TL;DR: A review of the finfish and shellfish microbiome, their diversity and functional properties, relationship with diseases, health status, data on species-specific metagenomics, probiotic research and bioinformatics skills can be found in this paper.
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Effects of Thermal Stress on the Gut Microbiome of Juvenile Milkfish ( Chanos chanos)

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the effects of thermal stress on the gut microbiome of milkfish and its interactions with the host's metabolism, showing that thermal stress induced changes in the milkfish gut microbiome, which may contribute to host's habituation to elevated temperatures over time.
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Gut Microbiota of Five Sympatrically Farmed Marine Fish Species in the Aegean Sea.

TL;DR: The results of the present study may provide evidence that adult fish farmed in the Mediterranean Sea have a rather divergent and species-specific gut microbiota profile, which are shaped independently of the similar environmental conditions under which they grow.
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Application of ecological and evolutionary theory to microbiome community dynamics across systems.

TL;DR: In this article, a special feature set out to drive advancements in the application of eco-evolutionary theory to microbiome community dynamics through the development of microbiome-specific theoretical and conceptual frameworks across plant, human and non-human animal systems.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of aquaculture on world fish supplies

TL;DR: If the growing aquaculture industry is to sustain its contribution to world fish supplies, it must reduce wild fish inputs in feed and adopt more ecologically sound management practices.
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Indigenous Bacteria from the Gut Microbiota Regulate Host Serotonin Biosynthesis

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that Indigenous spore-forming bacteria from the mouse and human microbiota promote 5-HT biosynthesis from colonic enterochromaffin cells (ECs), which supply 5- HT to the mucosa, lumen, and circulating platelets and elevating luminal concentrations of particular microbial metabolites increases colonic and blood5-HT in germ-free mice.
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Role of microorganisms in the evolution of animals and plants: the hologenome theory of evolution.

TL;DR: The hologenome theory of evolution considers the holobiont (the animal or plant with all of its associated microorganisms) as a unit of selection in evolution and fits within the framework of the 'superorganism' proposed by Wilson and Sober.
Journal ArticleDOI

Innate host defense mechanisms of fish against viruses and bacteria

TL;DR: Innate defenses provide a pre-existing and fast-acting system of protection which is non-specific and relatively temperature-independent and thus has several advantages over the slow-acting and temperature-dependent specific immune responses.
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