Dear MARMAM community,

My co-authors and I are pleased to share our new open access publication
regarding the dolphin skin microbiome:

Hansen, J. J., Bloodgood, J. C. G, Kiel Reese, B., Waltzek, T. B., Barry,
K., Bouveroux, T., Sinclair, C., Subramaniam, K., Mullin, K. D., and
Carmichael, R.H. (2026), Novel method for collecting skin microbiome
samples from free-ranging bottlenose dolphin. Marine Mammal Science, 42(1),
e70104. https://doi.org/10.1111/mms.70104

Abstract:
Cetacean skin microbiome samples are traditionally collected by swabbing
the skin of captured animals or using skin tissue from remote biopsies. The
effects of different sampling methods are not well understood, and factors
such as swab type and storage methods may affect the microbiome. The
objective of this study was to determine if samples collected by swabbing
biopsied skin from bottlenose dolphins yield sufficient microbial DNA for
gene sequencing, while testing if commonly used sampling and storage
methods affect the skin microbiome. Skin swab samples were collected during
remote biopsy surveys with either a nylon flocked swab and flash frozen
with liquid nitrogen or with a cotton swab and stored in RNAlater.
Sequencing of the V3–V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene revealed swabs from
dolphin skin biopsies yielded sufficient DNA to characterize the
microbiome. We found no significant difference between the two sampling and
storage methods tested, suggesting that studies using different techniques
may be comparable. This work also demonstrates a novel technique to collect
samples for interpretation of the skin microbiome of free-ranging animals.
Benefits of this method are that it can be done without capture and
preserves valuable and typically scarce biopsy skin samples for other
analyses.

Best,
Joe
-- 
Joseph Hansen
[email protected]
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