Introduction

Pyrosomes are globally abundant pelagic tunicates that can alter marine ecosystems, especially when they bloom. Pyrosomes graze efficiently1,2,3,4,5 and, in turn, become prey to fish,6,7 sea turtles,8 seabirds,9,10 and marine mammals,11 and provide habitats to invertebrates.8,12 Through sinking after death, vertical migration, and fecal pellets, pyrosomes contribute to detrital food webs, transport carbon below the mixed layer,3 and feed benthic megafauna.13,14 Thus, pyrosomes have the capacity to dramatically alter energy and carbon cycles in marine ecosystems, however, knowledge of pyrosome biology is limited.

Addressing pyrosome interactions with marine microorganisms could improve the understanding of pyrosome biology, bloom dynamics, and impacts to ecosystems because marine microorganisms are major players in animal biology,15 marine trophic structure,16 and biogeochemical cycling.17 As filter feeders, pyrosomes ingest numerous microorganisms. Retention of large eukaryotic phytoplankton has been established,2,4,5,18 but feeding on smaller abundant heterotrophic marine microbes has not been directly tested.19 Pyrosome bioluminescence suggests a host-specific relationship with microbial symbionts, though none have been identified.20,21,22 The microbiomes of other tunicates provide their host with nitrogen,23 carbon,24 secondary metabolites,25 extending the host range into nutrient poor environments. For non-tunicate gelatinous plankton, such as jellyfish and ctenophores, microbial associates can be vectors for fish pathogens.26,27,28 In addition, marine animals are a source of microbial diversity to marine ecosystems, especially for the seawater rare biosphere.29 These characteristics of pyrosomes and other gelatinous animals point to great potential for pyrosome–microbe interactions to influence pyrosome biology and seawater microbial communities.

Here, we examined the microbial community of pyrosomes (i.e., the pyrosome microbiome) to expand the understanding of pyrosome biology and impacts on marine microbial ecosystems. Pyrosoma atlanticum colonies and surrounding seawater were sampled during bloom conditions in the Northern California Current System (NCC). We measured microbial community structure and diversity via 16S rRNA gene sequencing, flow cytometry, and microscopy. The goals of this study were to: (1) compare the pyrosome microbial community to surrounding seawater, (2) investigate the roles of specific microbial taxa in pyrosome ecology, and (3) identify potential roles of pyrosomes in controlling populations of marine microorganisms through feeding. Together, these data demonstrate that pyrosomes shape, and are shaped by, marine microbial communities. Future work to account for their role in marine ecosystems, especially during blooms, should consider pyrosome–microbe interactions.

Method and materials

Northern California Current (NCC) System during the 2018 pyrosome bloom

Pyrosomes and seawater were collected from the NCC, off the Oregon Coast, in July 2018, near the peak of a multiyear bloom of P. atlanticum.30,31,32 Samples were collected from the R/V Sally Ride (SR1810) along the Newport Hydrographic Line. Station D5 (Cast 20, 44.652141N; 125.117573W) was sampled on July 9, 2018 in the presence of a strong temperature gradient in the top 20 meters and a chlorophyll peak at 17 meters (Supplementary Fig. 1A). Station D3 (Cast 26, 44.651756N; 124.589313W) was sampled on July 11, 2018 in the presence of a mixed layer depth of 15 meters and a chlorophyll peak at the base of the mixed layer (Supplementary Fig. 1B).

Pyrosome and seawater sampling

Pyrosomes were sampled using a coupled multiple opening and closing net and environmental sensing system33 with mesh sizes of either 333 µm or 1 mm. Seawater was collected using a CTD Rosette with 24 12 L Niskin bottles. At Station D5, three pyrosomes were sampled between 50 and 75 meters, and seawater was collected from 90, 25, 15, and 4 meters. At Station D3, four pyrosomes were sampled between 0 and 100 meters, and seawater was collected from 90, 25, 17, and 10 meters. 1 L seawater samples were filtered through a 1.6 µm Whatman GF/A microfiber filter and collected on 0.2 µm Pall Supor PES membranes. Pyrosomes were rinsed three times with 0.2 µm filtered seawater to remove unattached microbes. Zooids were extruded from the tunic by applying digital pressure along the interior cavity of the pyrosome. The collected material (zooids, pyrosome fecal material, and mucus) was transferred to a sterile tube and allowed to settle for five min then rinsed three times with 0.2 µm filtered seawater to remove unattached microbes. Samples for flow cytometry were fixed with 0.125% TEM-grade glutaraldehyde (Tousimis) and incubated for 10 min in the dark at room temperature before freezing in liquid nitrogen. Samples for microscopy were rinsed with freshwater to prevent salt crystals from inhibiting imaging and then fixed with 0.125% TEM-grade glutaraldehyde. All samples including pyrosome tissue and seawater were archived at −20 or −80 °C.

DNA extractions and PCR with universal 16S rRNA gene primers

DNA extraction was done using the DNeasy Plant Tissue Mini Kit (Qiagen) with the following modifications. Pyrosome tissue was ground with a sterile pestle (Axygen, Tewksbury, USA) for 3 min prior to extraction. Seawater and pyrosome samples were lysed by bead beating with 0.55 and 0.25 mm sterile glass beads at 30 Hz for 2 min after addition of lysis buffer, freeze-fractured three times, incubated with Proteinase K (VWR Chemicals, Solon, OH, USA) at 20 mg/mL for 1 h at 55 °C, and incubated with RNase A at 100 mg/mL for 10 min at 65 °C. To minimize amplification of eukaryotic host DNA, the primer pair 515F‐Y/806R was chosen to amplify the 16S rRNA V4 hypervariable region with conditions as published.34 Reactions were performed with 0.5–2 ng of DNA using the QuantaBio 5Prime HotMasterMix (Qiagen Beverly, MA, USA). The Agilent High Sensitivity Kit in the Bioanalyzer (Agilent Technologies, Waldbronn, Germany) confirmed amplicon size. Triplicate reactions from each sample were pooled and paired-end sequenced with Illumina MiSeq v.3 (Illumina, San Diego, USA).

Identification of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs)

The program dada235 was used to identify unique ASVs from raw sequence reads. Using the function filterAndTrim, forward and reverse primer sequences were removed, maxEE was set to 2, trunQ was set to 11, maxN was set to 0. The function orient.fwd was used to orient sequences in the same direction. About 30% of sequence reads were removed from each sample due to low quality. Error rates of forward and reverse reads were modeled with learnerrors for 100 Million bases. Paired ends were merged with mergePairs and unique sequences were inferred with the function dada. Chimeras were removed with removeBimeraDenovo using the “consensus” method. Taxonomy of the ASVs to the species level was performed with the function assignTaxonomy against RefSeq+RDP version 2,36,37,38 with 50 as the minimum bootstrap confidence for assigning a taxonomic level. In addition to Bacteria and Archaea sequences, chloroplast sequences from eukaryotic phytoplankton were examined. The similarity of ASVs to known sequences from environmental and microbial isolates was determined through NCBI BLASTn39 against NT and ENV_NT. For each ASV, we retained information from the top 20 best hits including percent identity, accession number, and sample source (i.e., host, sample, metadata). The phyloseq package40 was used to combine, analyze, and graphically display ASV tables (Fig. 1). Raw sequence data were deposited to BioProject PRJNA659246. Data on ASV taxonomy, sample attributes, and quality-filtered raw read abundance are in Supplementary Tables 1 and 2 and Supplementary Figs. 2 and 3.

Fig. 1: Top 50 most abundant ASVs in pyrosome and seawater samples colored by class and genus.
figure 1

Individual ASVs within the same genus are indicated by horizontal black lines. Individual pyrosome samples are designated by the station where they were sampled and a unique identifier (i.e., P1 = pyrosome 1). Individual seawater samples are designated by the station where they were sampled and the depth of collection in meters.

Diversity metrics

Alpha and beta diversities were calculated to determine differences in microbial community structure between pyrosomes and seawater. Alpha diversity measures were performed on the non-rarefied, non-standardized, data set to allow for the influence of rare ASVs and singletons. Chao1 and Shannon measures of alpha diversity were calculated and visualized using the function plot_richness in phyloseq40 using the wilcoxon test for significance. Analysis of beta diversity was performed on ASV relative abundance standardized to median size of the sequence libraries. The phyloseq function ordinate was used to calculate Bray Curtis dissimilarities and visualize the results with NMDS. Analysis of similarity (ANOSIM)41 was used to test significance (p value) and strength of clustering (R statistic) by sample type and depth, which are displayed in Fig. 2 and Supplementary Fig. 4.

Fig. 2: The pyrosome microbiome is less diverse and distinct from surrounding seawater.
figure 2

Alpha diversity metrics for Chao1 (A) and Shannon diversity (B) were significantly less for pyrosomes than surrounding seawater (p values < 0.05, Wilcox test). NMDS of Bray Curtis Dissimilarity (C) showed strong differences between seawater and pyrosomes (ANOSIM). Most ASVs (taxa) clustered with pyrosomes or seawater, and a few ASVs overlapped between the two sample types. Supplementary Fig. 4 shows similarity of pyrosome diversity across depths and significant changes in seawater diversity over depth.

Differential abundance analysis

DESeq242 was used to identify ASVs that were significantly differentially abundant in pyrosomes compared to seawater following recommendations for microbiome data.43 DESeq2 was performed on the non-rarefied data set of ASV counts standardized to the median size of the sequence libraries (Supplementary Table 3 and Supplementary Fig. 5). The significance of differences between pyrosomes and seawater for each ASV was assessed with the Wald test using the Benjamini–Hochberg (BH) adjustment for multiple tests. BH adjusted p values < 0.01 were called “significantly differentially abundant,” and ASVs with p values ≥ 0.01 were designated “not significantly differentially abundant”. Significantly differentially abundant ASVs with positive log2(fold change) were designated “pyrosome enriched” and those with negative log2(fold change) were designated as “seawater enriched”.

Categorizing ASVs by potential ecological role

ASVs were categorized by their distribution across pyrosomes and seawater, and similarity to known sequences (Supplementary Fig. 6) to generate hypotheses on their ecological roles. The number of ASVs in each category is displayed in Fig. 3. Pyrosome-specific ASVs were considered as potential symbionts, broadly defined to include commensal, mutualistic, pathogenic, and parasitic interactions44 (Supplementary Table 4). “Shared ASVs” were present in both seawater and pyrosome samples, and could either be significantly differentially abundant in the two sample types or not (Supplementary Table 5). Analysis of shared ASVs was limited to the most abundant. Shared ASVs were considered potential symbionts or consumed prey. We identified ASVs that were present in all pyrosomes (100% of pyrosome samples) as the pyrosome “core” microbiome, regardless of their presence in seawater (Supplementary Table 6). This definition of core is stringent compared to other studies, such as in sponges,45 especially given the compositional nature (i.e., relative abundance) of our data set. Pyrosome core ASVs were considered potential symbionts or potential consumed prey. “Seawater-specific ASVs” were significantly enriched in seawater relative to pyrosomes (via DESeq2) and were absent from all pyrosomes (Supplementary Table 7) and were considered to belong to non-pyrosome-associated microbial taxa. We acknowledge the caveat of the compositional nature of the 16S rRNA gene data set,46 which requires semiquantitative or qualitative interpretation.

Fig. 3: Categorization of ASVs based on their relative abundance and distribution across pyrosomes and seawater.
figure 3

A Black bar plots show the number of ASVs in each individual category from the total of 2284 ASVs detected in all samples. “Enriched” (or “not enriched”) refers to differential abundance analysis between seawater and pyrosome samples with DESeq2. “Top 50” are the fifty most abundant ASVs that were not differentially abundant between the two sample types. B Colored dots indicate the category (or, categories), represented in the colored bar plots of defined ASV groups including “seawater-specific”, “pyrosome-specific”, or “shared” ASVs. A subset of specific ASVs from each category (bar plots, (B)) is discussed further in the text.

Phylogeny of putative bioluminescent taxa

Phylogenetic analysis of ASVs belonging to Vibrionacae genera Vibrio, Aliivibrio, and Photobacterium was performed to study putative bioluminescent taxa in the pyrosome microbiome (Fig. 4 and Supplementary Table 8). Reference sequences from each genera were chosen as in previous studies47 using E. coli as an outgroup. Molecular Evolutionary Genetics Analysis (MEGA v10.1.8)48 was used to align with ClustalW (240 bp) and construct maximum likelihood trees with 1000 bootstraps using the Hasegawa–Kishino–Yano (1985) model. Phylogenetic trees were annotated and visualized with iTOL v5.49

Fig. 4: Pyrosomes contain ASVs from multiple lineages of bioluminescent taxa.
figure 4

A Percent relative abundance of possible bioluminescent ASVs across pyrosomes samples (P) and seawater samples (S). B Maximum likelihood tree of 16S rRNA gene of ASVs relative to reference sequences for Vibrio, Photobacterium, and Aliivibrio.

Flow cytometry

Flow cytometry was used to quantify the pigmented cells (i.e., phytoplankton) in the pyrosomes and seawater. Pyrosome flow cytometry samples were pulverized with a sterile pestle and filtered through a 50 µm filter to remove tissue that would clog the flow cytometer. A BD influx high-speed cell sorter (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA) equipped with a small particle detector collected data triggered on forward-scattered light (FSC). For each particle, data on FSC, red fluorescence (chlorophyll), and orange fluorescence (phycoerythrin) were collected. Flow cytometry data were analyzed using FlowJo v10.6.2 and R v3.6.1 and deposited into FlowRepository #FR-FCM-Z3YE. Pigmented cells were defined based on their fluorescence signals above the autofluorescence of the macerated pyrosome tissue. Cells were classified as pigmented picoeukaryotes (PPE, chlorophyll only) or Synechococcus (chlorophyll and phycoerythrin). Welch’s t test was used to compare the relative abundance of Synechococcus to PPE in seawater vs. pyrosomes.

Microscopy

Triplicate 10 µL aliquots of preserved pyrosome samples were analyzed using compound light microscopy and environmental scanning electron microscopy (eSEM). A Nikon Epifluorescence microscope equipped with a Canon EOS 5D camera was used to capture images of cells greater than 10 µm in diameter. A FEI Quanta eSEM microscope was used to capture images of cells < 10 µm. Images of whole cells were identified by morphology and size.50,51,52 Cells were identified into broad groupings: diatoms (single vs. chain, pennate vs. centric), flagellates, nanozooplankton, mixed assemblages, and unidentified. Cells captured using eSEM were also identified to the genus level where visibly distinct. Brightness and contrast of images were adjusted using ImageJ v1.52k or Adobe Illustrator v24.1.

Results and discussion

Pyrosome-specific microbial community

This is the first study to report on the microbial communities of the entire organism of Thaliacean Order Pyrosomidae (pyrosomes). In total, 4,437,471 high-quality sequences were obtained from pyrosomes and seawater with a median of 268,634 reads per sample (Supplementary Fig. 2A). From these sequences, 2284 unique ASVs were discovered from 25 phyla. Most sequences belonged to Proteobacteria (80%), Bacteroidetes (6%), or Bacteria unclassified at the phylum level (6%) (Supplementary Fig. 2B).

Major differences were evident between pyrosome and seawater microbial communities, suggesting pyrosome-specific associations with marine microorganisms. Pyrosomes were dominated by three ASVs from Alphaproteobacteria and Gammaproteobacteria lineages (Fig. 1A). In contrast, seawater contained numerous closely related ASVs from many seawater-associated lineages including SAR11, Flavobacteriia, Euryarchaeota, and Thaumarchaeota (Fig. 1B). Pyrosome microbial communities were significantly less diverse than seawater in richness (Chao1, p value = 0.02) and richness and evenness (Shannon, p value < 0.01) (Fig. 2A), though pyrosome microbiomes spanned a greater range of alpha diversities than seawater samples. The low diversity of pyrosomes relative to seawater was similar to observations of ctenophores53 and jellyfish,54 but contrasted with the high diversity of benthic sponge and coral microbiomes relative to seawater.55,56

Beta-diversity analysis revealed pyrosome-specific microbial community structure, distinct from seawater (ANOSIM R statistic = 0.95, p value < 0.01), which included thousands of less abundant microbial taxa in addition to the dominant taxa (Fig. 2C). Seawater microbial communities partitioned significantly by depth (p value < 0.01, Supplementary Fig. 4B) likely due to vertical stratification at the study site. In contrast, pyrosome microbial communities were similar between stations and depths suggesting that host properties more strongly control pyrosome microbial communities than exposure to surrounding seawater (Supplementary Fig. 4C, D).

Two novel taxa dominate the pyrosome microbiome

Pyrosome microbial communities were numerically dominated by two ASVs matching Alphaproteobacteria (ASV1) and Gammaproteobacteria (ASV2) (Fig. 1). At the extreme, a single ASV accounted for 92% of the sequences recovered from one pyrosome (Fig. 1, pyrosome 4). ASV1 was shared between pyrosomes and seawater and was part of the pyrosome core microbiome (Supplementary Tables 5 and 6 and Supplementary Fig. 7). Classified as an Alphaproteobacterium, ASV1 was only 90% similar to existing sequences, which included symbionts from a gutless marine annelid (Siboglinidae) known to depend on high densities of microbial chemolithotrophic endosymbionts for nutrition.57 ASV2 was exclusively present in pyrosomes, but not part of the pyrosome core. ASV2 belonged to the Order Vibrionaceae, Genus Vibrio, but was only 92.1% similar to existing sequences from fish guts and corals (Supplementary Table 4). The dominance of these two ASVs suggests that numerous cells from these novel taxa associate with pyrosomes as broadly defined symbionts.44

Aside from these two dominant ASVs, additional abundant pyrosome-specific and shared ASVs were novel compared to existing sequence databases. Similar to ASV2, ASV5 was one of the most abundant shared ASVs, but was distinct (92.1% identity) from other known Vibrio (Fig. 4 and Supplementary Table 5). Pyrosome-specific ASV7 was classified as an Alphaproteobacterium with 88.8% similarity to sequences from coastal seawater, symbionts of the tunicate Ciona intestinalis, and symbionts of the coral Gorgonia ventalina (Supplementary Table 4). Similarly, pyrosome-specific and core ASV12 was 79.9% similar to existing sequences including seawater near coral reefs and the sponge Tethya californiana (Supplementary Table 4). These abundant pyrosome ASV sequences were distinct from known symbionts of other marine invertebrates suggesting that pyrosomes contain unique symbionts. Study of the microbiomes of other pelagic tunicates will reveal whether these ASVs are unique to pyrosomes.

An exception to the pattern of dominance by a few ASVs was an individual pyrosome where many diverse ASVs composed 50% of its sequence reads (pyrosome 1, Fig. 1). This pyrosome matched or exceeded seawater samples in alpha diversity (Fig. 2A and Supplementary Fig. 3), indicating that pyrosome associations with dominant symbionts may be dynamic, zooid, colony, or condition specific. Dynamic infection of animal hosts by symbionts or pathogens has been shown in other animal–microbe systems. In the Hawaiian bobtail squid-Aliivibrio symbiosis, the number of symbionts recruited from seawater determines host colonization levels.58 Alternatively, variation in dominant symbionts across individual pyrosomes could indicate microbiome structuring at the individual colony level, similar to observations in corals.55

Pyrosome-specific symbionts and seawater-derived symbionts form the pyrosome microbiome

To generate additional hypotheses on the ecological role of the ASVs, we defined four groups of ASVs based on their distribution in pyrosomes and seawater. First, we discovered 128 “pyrosome-specific” ASVs (Fig. 3 and Supplementary Table 4), which may be symbionts that lack a free-living seawater phase. Well-represented microbial lineages in the pyrosome-specific group included Actinomycetales, Cytophagales, Flavobacteriales, Sphingobacteriales, Planctomycetes, Rhodobacterales, Myxococcales, Desulfovibrionales, Pseudomonadales, Vibrionales, and Verrucomicrobiales. These ASVs were most similar to sequences from a wide range of sources including seawater, marine, and terrestrial animals, and have been recovered from the microbiomes of hosts including corals, sponges, and sea squirts (Supplementary Fig. 6 and Supplementary Table 4). Second, we discovered 83 “shared ASVs” defined as ASVs significantly enriched in seawater and present in pyrosomes (n = 20), enriched in pyrosomes and present in seawater (n = 15), or numerous, but not significantly differentially abundant between pyrosomes and seawater (n = 48) (Fig. 3). We hypothesize that shared ASVs are pyrosome symbionts with a free-living seawater phase or retained microbial prey from filter feeding. Shared ASVs matched existing sequences from primarily seawater sources with some best hits to symbionts of animal hosts (Supplementary Fig. 6 and Supplementary Table 5). Microbial lineages among shared ASVs included Flavobacteriales, Planctomycetes, SAR11, Rhodobacterales, Rhodospirillales, Alteromonadales, and Nitrosopumilales (Supplementary Table 5). Next, we discovered 21 ASVs that comprised the pyrosome core microbiome and were either absent in seawater (pyrosome specific) or present in seawater (shared). Pyrosome core ASVs may be integral to pyrosome biology as symbionts or as microbial prey. Lastly, we discovered 140 “seawater-specific ASVs” defined as ASVs significantly enriched in seawater samples and absent in pyrosomes (Fig. 3). We hypothesize that seawater-specific ASVs are free-living microorganisms not consumed by pyrosomes. Seawater-specific ASVs were highly similar to existing sequences from ubiquitous marine microbial lineages (Supplementary Fig. 6 and Supplementary Table 7). Together these results demonstrate that the pyrosome microbiome is a combination of host-specific symbionts that exist without a free-living seawater phase and microbial taxa that are either recruited from seawater or grazed as prey. The interaction of pyrosomes with a complex assemblage of microorganisms reflects what is understood for benthic tunicates23,24,25 but contrasts with non-filter-feeding gelatinous animals such as Ctenophora (comb jellies) which have no, or few, symbionts.59,60

Living host to a complex biofilm microbial community

Pyrosomes contained ASVs from several microbial lineages implicated in the colonization or control of marine biofilms including Amylibacter ulvae, Myxococcales, Actinobacteria, and Planctomycetes (Supplementary Tables 4 and 5). Specifically, ASV3 was identical to Amylibacter ulvae, which was isolated from a green alga61 and may contribute to algal morphology development, disease resistance, nutrient provision, and spore release,62 and is abundant in biofilms on marine surfaces.63 ASV3 was the third most abundant taxa in pyrosomes and was also abundant in seawater (Supplementary Fig. 7), consistent with the prevalence of Amylibacter sp. in diverse coastal marine ecosystems.64 Planctomycetes were represented in the pyrosome core and pyrosome-specific microbiota by eight ASVs from the genera Rhodopirellula, Phycisphaera, and Blastopirellula (Supplementary Tables 46). In the whole data set, Planctomycetes were represented by over 50 ASVs, most of which were exclusively present, or enriched, in pyrosomes relative to seawater (Supplementary Fig. 8). Planctomycetes colonize marine surfaces including algae,65 sponges,66,67 ascidians,68 and corals56,69,70 through resistance to several antibiotics.71 The numerous Planctomycete ASVs discovered in pyrosomes mirrors macroalgae microbial communities,72 thus Planctomycetes may control pyrosome surface-associated biofilms, participate in carbon cycling, and consume specific polysaccharides produced by pyrosomes. Another group of surface-related taxa among pyrosome-specific ASVs was of the Order Actinomycetales (Supplementary Table 4), a lineage prevalent in marine and freshwater habitats73,74 and common symbionts of marine invertebrates. Pyrosome-specific Actinomycetales ASVs were not present in seawater samples, though other Actinomycetales ASVs existed in seawater (Supplementary Fig. 8). Pyrosome-specific Actinomycetales ASVs were highly similar (99–100%) to existing sequences from a wide range of sources including sponges, plant hosts, wastewater, and ice (Supplementary Table 4). Actinomycetes produce diverse bioactive secondary metabolites with antibacterial and antifungal properties75,76 and provide hosts with chemical defenses,73,77 an interesting possibility for pyrosomes. Finally, three ASVs were identified as the cooperative predatory microorganism Myxococcales (Supplementary Table 4).78,79 As broad spectrum predators, Myxococcales appear to regulate microbial structure and protect hosts from pathogens and disease80,81,82,83 through secretion of vesicles84 and antimicrobial enzymes.85 The presence of Amylibacter, Planctomycetes, Actinomycetes, and Myxococcales suggest that pyrosome colonies are living hosts to a complex surface-associated microbial community with an active network of microbial predator–prey relationships. The known physiologies of these taxa indicate a dynamic balance between biofilm growth, fueled by pyrosome exudates and seawater nutrients, and controlled through the production of antimicrobial compounds and predatory behavior.

Pyrosomes contain multiple lineages of bioluminescent taxa

Pyrosomes are known for their bioluminescence, however, the bioluminescent mechanism is a subject of debate. A luciferase similar to the cnidarian luciferase RLuc is present in the pyrosome transcriptome, suggesting intrinsic bioluminescence of the pyrosome.86 However, several lines of evidence point to microbial symbionts as the agents of pyrosome bioluminescence including: the presence of bioluminescent Photobacterium,87 high bacterial luciferase activity in luminous organelles,88 the propagation of bioluminescence along pyrosome colonies without connective tissue,89 variation in the rates of individual zooid responses to light, and increased zooid recruitment with increased luminescence.20 As bioluminescence may be the basis for predator evasion and inter-colony communication, identifying the mechanism and potential microbial symbionts that provide bioluminescence is key to understanding pyrosome biology.

We discovered 14 ASVs from bioluminescent genera Aliivibrio, Vibrio, and Photobacterium (Supplementary Table 8). These ASVs were either pyrosome specific or pyrosome enriched (Fig. 4). We hypothesize that pyrosome bioluminescence originates from at least one of these symbionts. Notably, individual pyrosomes had different combinations of ASVs from bioluminescent taxa (Fig. 4A). ASV67, a Photobacterium related to known luminescent clades (Fig. 4B), was present in all but one pyrosome. Three other Photobacterium ASVs were related to both bioluminescent (Clade I) and non-bioluminescent (Clade II) Photobacterium. Aliivibrio, represented by ASV557, was present in two pyrosomes and was identical to A. fischeri (Supplementary Table 8 and Fig. 4B), the bioluminescent symbiont of the Hawaiian bobtail squid E. scolopes. The sporadic distribution of Aliivibrio among the pyrosomes does not rule out its involvement in pyrosome bioluminescence. In the symbiosis between A. fischeri and E. scolopes cultivation of the symbiont reoccurs daily from low concentrations.90 Vibrio was represented by nine ASVs with varying phylogenetic relationships to known Vibrio (Supplementary Table 8 and Fig. 4B). ASV2 and ASV5 had the highest relative abundances and formed a separate group from existing sequences. The high abundance of ASV2 and ASV5 may indicate their concentration in a luminescent organ. Alternatively, Vibrio is a diverse group also responsible for pathogenesis91 and our short 16S rRNA gene reads limit robust reconstruction of Vibrio phylogeny.47 These results are consistent with reports of Photobacterium within the pyrosome light organ.87

The presence of coexisting putative bioluminescent taxa suggests that pyrosome bioluminescence could be the product of multiple microbial taxa, consistent with functional redundancy in animal microbiomes.92,93 Other studies of pyrosomes also detected multiple potentially bioluminescent microbial taxa.87 Specific to bioluminescence, fish light organs exhibit such functional redundancy with Photobacterium cosymbiosis.94 However, host and symbiont phylogeny in fish light organs are not congruent, and suggest acquisition of the symbionts from the environment.95 Further work on pyrosomes could demonstrate whether the unique bioluminescence of pyrosomes are an emergent property of coexisting luminescent taxa, arise from a single symbiont, and reveal the degree of congruency between symbionts and host evolution.

Pyrosomes graze diverse microbes with a preference for eukaryotic phytoplankton

Pyrosomes capture planktonic microorganisms by filtering seawater across a mucus mesh.96,97 While several studies have documented capture of eukaryotic phytoplankton,1,4,5,18 little is understood about the selectivity or efficiency of microbial prey capture by pyrosomes, especially their consumption of abundant marine microbial heterotrophs not detected by pigment-based methods. Given their 0.6 µm mesh pore size,98 we expect retention of microbial prey ranging from small Bacteria and Archaea to large eukaryotic microbes. To identify microbial prey, we examined pyrosomes for the presence of well-characterized abundant and free-living marine microorganisms. Specifically, these potential prey included Pelagibacter (SAR11), Marinimicrobia, Euryarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota, Synechococcus, and eukaryotic phytoplankton.

We found evidence for retention of microbial prey across nearly all tested free-living microbial lineages and predicted cell sizes, but observed enhanced retention of large eukaryotic phytoplankton. Diverse eukaryotic phytoplankton chloroplast ASVs were significantly enriched in pyrosomes relative to seawater (Fig. 5A, B), some of which were in the pyrosome core (Supplementary Fig. 7), and included centric diatoms (Thalassiosira pseudonana), pennate diatoms (Phaeodactylum tricornutum), and prymnesiophytes. ASVs from cryptophytes, dinoflagellates, and prasinophytes were also present in pyrosomes but were not significantly different from seawater. ASVs from the smaller planktonic microbes Synechococcus, Pelagibacter, Marinimicrobia, Euryarchaeota, and Thaumarchaeota were very abundant in seawater samples (Fig. 5B) but present more sporadically across pyrosomes. To test whether the sporadic presence of these ASVs could be due to saturation of sequencing by dominant ASVs (above), we looked at the abundance of the potential prey in an individual pyrosome that was not dominated by a single ASV (pyrosome 1) (Fig. 1). Pyrosome 1 had no other characteristics that distinguished it from other pyrosome samples. We found that ASVs from Synechococcus, Pelagibacter, and Nitrosopumilus were present, and that T. pseudonana and Prymnesiophyceae were significantly more abundant than Pelagibacter (p value < 0.05). Single ASVs representing the other taxa precluded statistical tests. The retention of the smallest marine microbes (i.e., Pelagibacter) by pyrosomes is consistent with observations in other pelagic tunicates where cells smaller than mesh openings are consumed efficiently due to direct interception on mucus fibers.99 The lower retention of Pelagibacter in pyrosomes, relative to eukaryotic phytoplankton, is consistent with low retention of Pelagibacter in appendicularians and ascidians, due to unique microbial surface membrane properties.100 However, we cannot rule out size as a major factor in determining pyrosome retention of microbial prey.

Fig. 5: Pyrosomes retain ASVs from multiple free-living marine microbial lineages as prey.
figure 5

A Sign of log2 fold change (FC) for ASVs significantly differentially abundant (adjusted p value < 0.01) between pyrosomes and seawater. B Distribution and relative abundance of free-living potential prey ASVs across pyrosomes and seawater samples colored by lowest level of taxonomic classification. C log2 fold change of retained prey ASVs in an individual pyrosome (pyrosome 1) relative to mean relative abundance of each ASV in seawater samples. Comparison of means (t-test) indicates that T. pseudonana and Prymnesiophytes are significantly more abundant than P. ubique. Tests for taxa with only one ASV were not performed. D The presence of chlorophyll positive cells in pyrosomes determined by flow cytometry. E Chlorophyll positive cells were identified as pigmented picoeukaryotes (PPE) with chlorophyll but no phycoerythrin or Synechococcus with chlorophyll and phycoerythrin. F The relative abundance of Synechococcus to pigmented picoeukaryotes in seawater and pyrosomes was not significantly different (Welch’s t test, p value = 0.086). Images of phytoplankton found within pyrosomes include: G centric diatoms (38*, 47, 43 µm), H centric diatoms: Thalassiosira sp. (16 µm*), I pennate diatoms (84, 120, 44 µm), J flagellates (40, 33, 24, 30 µm), and K nanozooplankton (13, 17 µm). Sizes denote minimum dimension. Scale bars are 10 µm. Asterisks (*) denote images captured with eSEM; remaining images captured with compound light microscopy.

Five of the eukaryotic phytoplankton ASVs were also observed by microscopy and included Bacillariophyta, Prymnesiophyceae, Thalassiosira sp., Chlorophyta, and Dinophyceae (Fig. 5G–K). Cells ranged from 1 to 120 µm with the majority of the cells > 10 µm. These results were consistent with the sequence results showing grazing of large phytoplankton. Flow cytometry analysis of pyrosomes also revealed retention of chlorophyll-containing cells including Synechococcus and PPE (Fig. 5D), also consistent with sequence results (Fig. 5B). To test whether pyrosomes were selectively feeding on one phytoplankton group, we compared the relative abundance of Synechococcus to PPE in the seawater and pyrosomes. The ratio of Synechococcus to PPE was 1.9-fold higher in seawater than in pyrosomes, but this difference was not significant (Welch’s t test, p value = 0.09). Thus, these results do not support positive selection for larger phytoplankton over small cells. However, the robust quantification of phytoplankton relative abundances enabled by flow cytometry did reveal large individual variation in prey content. One caveat here is that the pulverization of pyrosome tissue prior to flow cytometric analysis may have destroyed some eukaryotic cells, leading to underestimation of the number of retained eukaryotes. Possibly, the vertical and horizontal migration of pyrosomes3 means coexisting pyrosomes fed on seawater from different depths or locations. Alternatively, differences between individual pyrosomes may reflect colony size, age, or digestion rates as observed in other gelatinous organisms.101,102 In addition, 16S rRNA gene sequencing for detection of eukaryotic phytoplankton presents challenges related to phylogenetic resolution.103 Also, phytoplankton plastids are present in different locations intracellularly and occur in different numbers across taxa,104 leading to different extraction efficiencies and detection via sequencing.

This study is the first to demonstrate that pyrosomes retain a wide range of microbial prey, not only large eukaryotic phytoplankton. We found that pyrosomes preferentially concentrate large eukaryotic phytoplankton relative to smaller picocyanobacteria, Bacteria, and Archaea. Given high pyrosome seawater filtration rates1,5 and massive abundances during blooms13,14,30,31 reaching up to 95 colonies per m2,2 these observations suggest a major role for pyrosomes in restructuring marine microbial communities and microbe-driven biogeochemical cycling. In addition to physical parameters, such as temperature and currents, shifting availability of microbial prey may regulate pyrosome blooms. Thus, monitoring or modeling microbial community structure alongside gelatinous zooplankton may serve as a tool for predicting blooms and global contributions to the carbon cycle.105 Additional experiments, particularly in situ grazing experiments,106 will be required to robustly quantify pyrosome feeding preferences and rates.

Conclusions

Our results reveal a distinct pyrosome microbiome that is dominated by a few novel taxa, suggesting host-specific relationships and high density of symbionts associated with pyrosomes. Several taxa were related to known bioluminescent microorganisms, suggesting that the unique bioluminescent properties of pyrosomes are due to a microbial symbiont or multiple taxa in cosymbiosis. Pyrosomes harbored sequences from a wide range of free-living microbial taxa, consistent with grazing on a diversity of microbial cells, however, eukaryotic phytoplankton dominated the retained prey species. Numerous microorganisms from taxa that colonize and control surface microbial communities were present, indicating a complex microbial ecosystem on the surface of pyrosomes. Together these results demonstrate that pyrosome biology is intimately linked to marine microorganisms as symbionts, pathogens, and prey. Pyrosome blooms may alter community structure in microbial food webs, influencing biogeochemical cycling and trophic structure in ecosystems.