System design and habitat type drive microbial communities in recirculating aquaculture systems: comparison of conventional fish-only and sustainable aquaponic systems
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Publication date
2026-02-24ISSN
1664-302X
Abstract
This study compares how system design and experimental conditions shape bacterial communities across distinct habitats in a coupled seawater aquaponic system and a marine RAS, and explores their functional implications for system efficiency and productivity. Bacterial communities from fish guts, biofilters, biofilms and water were characterized after 4 months of rearing flathead grey mullet (Mugil cephalus) and lasswort (Salicornia patula) using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. In the RAS, bacterial richness (Chao1 and ACE) and diversity (Shannon and Simpson) progressively increased across compartments, while they remained stable in the aquaponic system, likely due to the differences in system design such as UV filtration in the RAS. Significant differences in bacterial community structure (weighted UniFrac) and composition were
found in the four habitat types compared between systems, reflecting the different design and functionality of each system. In particular, fish gut bacteria were typical teleost commensals associated with positive gut health and disease resistance, dominated by the phylum Pseudomonadota and the genus Pseudomonas but showing differences in lower abundant taxa between systems. The biofilm and water of the aquaponic system showed genera with plant growth-promoting, disease-resistance and nutrient-cycling properties, at higher abundances than in the RAS (Mycobacterium, Sulfitobacter, Marivita,
Fuerstiella, Blastopirellula, Hoeflea). Furthermore, the balance of nitrifying (i.e., Nitrosomonas) and denitrifying bacteria (Pseudomonas, Blastopirellula) in the biofilters of both systems supported efficient nitrogen cycling and water quality maintenance. Collectively, these results demonstrate that microbial assembly in aquaculture systems is governed by system design and habitat type, with potential functional consequences for fish gut health, plant growth, and overall system efficiency, highlighting the promise of integrated marine systems as sustainable food production strategies.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
637 - Produce of domestic (farmyard) animals and game
Pages
20
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Is part of
Frontiers in Microbiology
Grant agreement number
EC/H2020/862658/EU/New Technologies, Tools and Strategies for a Sustainable, Resilient and Innovative European Aquaculture/NewTechAqua
EC/HE/101084201/EU/Achieving Ecological Resilient Dynamism for the European food system through consumer-driven policies, socio-ecological challenges, biodiversity, data-driven policy, sustainable futures/ECO-READY
MICIU/Programa Estatal de I+D+I orientada a los retos de la sociedad/RTI2018-095653-R-I00/ES/La dieta y microbiota intestinal como herramientas para regular la adiposidad en peces/ADIPOQUIZ
Program
Aqüicultura
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- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3608]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/


