Login / Signup

Connecting thiamine availability to the microbial community composition in Chinook salmon spawning habitats of the Sacramento River basin.

Christopher P SuffridgeKelly C ShannonH MatthewsR C JohnsonC JeffresN MantuaA E WardE HolmesJ KindoppM AidooF S Colwell
Published in: Applied and environmental microbiology (2023)
Pacific salmon are keystone species with considerable economic importance and immeasurable cultural significance to Pacific Northwest indigenous peoples. Thiamine deficiency complex has recently been diagnosed as an emerging threat to the health and stability of multiple populations of salmonids ranging from California to Alaska. Microbial biosynthesis is the major source of thiamine in marine and aquatic environments. Despite this importance, the concentrations of thiamine and the identities of the microbial communities that cycle it are largely unknown. Here we investigate microbial communities and their relationship to thiamine in Chinook salmon spawning habitats in California's Sacramento River system to gain an understanding of how thiamine availability impacts salmonids suffering from thiamine deficiency complex.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • wastewater treatment
  • anaerobic digestion
  • life cycle