资源利用的可塑性决定了模式微生物群落中性状与群落结构之间的因果关系

Brendon McGuinness, Stephanie C. Weber, Frédéric Guichard
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引用次数: 0

摘要

解决物种性状与其相对丰度之间的关系是生态学的核心挑战。目前的假说认为相对丰度要么源于性状,要么独立于性状。然而,尽管取得了一些成功,这些假说并没有将性状与丰度之间的相互影响和反馈作用整合到群落结构(如相对丰度分布)的预测中。在此,我们研究了资源利用性状的可塑性如何影响性状与相对丰度之间的因果关系。我们采用了一个消费者-资源模型,该模型包含了资源利用的可塑性,其作用是优化生物体的生长,并以获取资源的生理机制的投资约束为基础。我们证明,可塑性的速率控制着性状与丰度动态之间的耦合强度,从而预测物种的相对丰度变化。我们首先展示了群落中单一物种的可塑性如何使所有其他非可塑性物种得以共存,这是竞争性相互作用产生的一种促进作用,在这种作用中,可塑性物种将其与竞争者的相似性降到最低,并最大限度地提高其环境中的资源利用效率。我们将这种环境-竞争权衡应用于预测性状-丰度关系,结果发现初始性状比最终性状值更能预测平衡丰度。这一结果凸显了瞬时动态对物种分类的重要推动作用。瞬时动态的时间尺度决定了平衡时 "生态等同 "出现后物种分选的强度。我们提出性状-丰度反馈是连接群落结构和集合的生态进化机制,突出了性状可塑性在群落动态中的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Resource-use plasticity governs the causal relationship between traits and community structure in model microbial communities
Resolving the relationship between species’ traits and their relative abundance is a central challenge in ecology. Current hypotheses assume relative abundances either result from or are independent of traits. However, despite some success, these hypotheses do not integrate the reciprocal and feedback interactions between traits and abundances to predictions of community structure such as relative abundance distributions. Here we study how plasticity in resource-use traits govern the causal relationship between traits and relative abundances. We adopt a consumer-resource model that incorporates resource-use plasticity that operates to optimize organism growth, underpinned by investment constraints in physiological machinery for acquisition of resources. We demonstrate that the rate of plasticity controls the coupling strength between trait and abundance dynamics, predicting species’ relative abundance variation. We first show how plasticity in a single species in a community allows all other non-plastic species to coexist, a case of facilitation emerging from competitive interactions where a plastic species minimizes its similarity with competitors and maximizes resource-use efficiency in its environment. We apply this environment-competition trade-off to predict trait-abundance relationships and reveal that initial traits are better predictors of equilibrium abundances than final trait values. This result highlights the importance of transient dynamics that drive species sorting. The temporal scale of transients determines the strength of species sorting due to the emergence of ‘ecological equivalence’ at equilibrium. We propose trait-abundance feedback as an eco-evolutionary mechanism linking community structure and assembly, highlighting trait plasticity’s role in community dynamics.
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