“…Studies of host‐associated microbiomes have become increasingly ubiquitous in recent years, driven by continued advances in high‐throughput sequencing technologies (HTS). The decreasing costs and enormous data outputs associated with HTS approaches (e.g., Illumina HiSeq and MiSeq platforms) have vastly expanded our understanding of microbial taxa associated with various hosts and ecosystems, including the human microbiome [e.g., gut and skin microbiome (Parfrey, Walters, & Knight, ; Schommer & Gallo, ; Turnbaugh et al., ; Walter & Ley, )], vertebrate and invertebrate species such as amphibians (Bataille, Lee‐Cruz, Tripathi, Kim, & Waldman, ; McKenzie, Bowers, Fierer, Knight, & Lauber, ; Walke et al., ), marine sponges (Fan, Liu, Simister, Webster, & Thomas, ; He, Liu, Karuppiah, Ren, & Li, ; Hentschel, Piel, Degnan, & Taylor, ), coral reefs (Bourne, Morrow, & Webster, ; Thompson, Rivera, Closek, & Medina, ; Ainsworth et al., ), oysters (Chauhan, Wafula, Lewis, & Pathak, ; Lokmer & Mathias Wegner, ) and household pets (Dewhirst et al., ; Dorn et al., ; Swanson et al., ; Weese, ).…”