Quantifying the contribution of the rare biosphere to natural disturbances.

Jianshu Zhao,Genevieve Brandt,Jessica L Gronniger,Zhao Wang,Jiaqian Li,Dana E Hunt,Luis M Rodriguez-R,Janet K Hatt,Konstantinos T Konstantinidis
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Abstract

Understanding how populations respond to disturbances represents a major goal for microbial ecology. While several hypotheses have been advanced to explain microbial community compositional changes in response to disturbance, appropriate data to test these hypotheses is scarce, due to the challenges in delineating rare vs. abundant taxa and generalists vs. specialists, a prerequisite for testing the theories. Here, we operationally define these two key concepts by employing the patterns of coverage of a (target) genome by a metagenome to identify rare populations, and by borrowing the proportional similarity index (PS index) from macroecology to identify generalists. We applied these concepts to time-series (field) metagenomes from the Piver's Island Coastal Observatory (PICO) to establish that coastal microbial communities are resilient to major perturbations such as tropical cyclones and (uncommon) cold or warm temperature events, in part due to the response of rare populations. Therefore, these results provide support for the insurance hypothesis [i.e., the rare biosphere has the buffering capacity to mitigate the effects of disturbance]. Additionally, generalists appear to contribute proportionally more than specialists to community adaptation to perturbations like warming, supporting the disturbance-specialization hypothesis [i.e., disturbance favors generalists]. Several of these findings were also observed in replicated laboratory mesocosms that aimed to simulate disturbances such as a rain-driven washout of microbial cells and a labile organic matter release from a phytoplankton bloom. Taken together, our results advance understanding of the mechanisms governing microbial population dynamics under changing environmental conditions and have implications for ecosystem modeling.
量化稀有生物圈对自然干扰的贡献。
了解种群对干扰的反应是微生物生态学的一个主要目标。虽然已经提出了几个假设来解释微生物群落组成对干扰的响应变化,但由于在描述稀有与丰富的分类群以及通才与专才(测试理论的先决条件)方面存在挑战,因此测试这些假设的适当数据很少。在这里,我们通过宏基因组覆盖(目标)基因组的模式来识别稀有种群,并通过借用宏观生态学中的比例相似指数(PS指数)来识别通才,从而在操作上定义了这两个关键概念。我们将这些概念应用于Piver岛海岸天文台(PICO)的时间序列(现场)宏基因组,以确定沿海微生物群落对热带气旋和(罕见的)冷或暖温度事件等重大扰动具有弹性,部分原因是由于稀有种群的反应。因此,这些结果为保险假设提供了支持[即,稀有生物圈具有缓冲能力,以减轻干扰的影响]。此外,通才在适应气候变暖等扰动方面的贡献似乎比专才大,这支持了干扰-专业化假设(即干扰有利于通才)。其中的一些发现也在实验室中被观察到,这些实验旨在模拟干扰,如由雨水驱动的微生物细胞冲洗和浮游植物繁殖释放的不稳定有机物质。综上所述,我们的研究结果促进了对不断变化的环境条件下微生物种群动态控制机制的理解,并对生态系统建模产生了影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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