William S Pearman, Allen G Rodrigo, Anna W Santure
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Within-host microbial selection and multiple microbial generations buffer the loss of host fitness under environmental change.
The relationship between, and joint selection on, a host and its microbes-the holobiont-can impact evolutionary and ecological outcomes of the host and its microbial community. We develop an agent-based modelling framework for understanding the ecological dynamics of hosts and their microbiomes. Our model incorporates numerous microbial generations per host generation allowing selection on both host and microbes. We then explore host and microbiome fitness and diversity in response to environmental change. We demonstrate that multiple microbial generations can buffer changes experienced across host lifetimes by smoothing environmental transitions. Our simulations reveal that microbial fitness and host fitness are at odds with each other when considering the impact of vertical inheritance of microbial communities from a host to its offspring-where high parent-offspring microbial transmission favours microbial fitness, while low transmission favours host fitness. These tradeoffs are minimized when microbial generation count per host generation is high. This may arise from 'cross-generational priority effects' which maintain diversity within the community and can subsequently enable selection of beneficial microbes by the host. Our model is extensible into new areas of holobiont research and provides novel insights into holobiont evolution under variable environmental conditions.
期刊介绍:
FEMS Microbiology Ecology aims to ensure efficient publication of high-quality papers that are original and provide a significant contribution to the understanding of microbial ecology. The journal contains Research Articles and MiniReviews on fundamental aspects of the ecology of microorganisms in natural soil, aquatic and atmospheric habitats, including extreme environments, and in artificial or managed environments. Research papers on pure cultures and in the areas of plant pathology and medical, food or veterinary microbiology will be published where they provide valuable generic information on microbial ecology. Papers can deal with culturable and non-culturable forms of any type of microorganism: bacteria, archaea, filamentous fungi, yeasts, protozoa, cyanobacteria, algae or viruses. In addition, the journal will publish Perspectives, Current Opinion and Controversy Articles, Commentaries and Letters to the Editor on topical issues in microbial ecology.
- Application of ecological theory to microbial ecology
- Interactions and signalling between microorganisms and with plants and animals
- Interactions between microorganisms and their physicochemical enviornment
- Microbial aspects of biogeochemical cycles and processes
- Microbial community ecology
- Phylogenetic and functional diversity of microbial communities
- Evolutionary biology of microorganisms