微生物组的空间尺度在模型岛屿生态系统的成员、宿主和环境之间有所不同。

Jason L Baer,Kacie T Kajihara,Leena L Vilonen,Allie J Hall,Cadie M Young,Danyel K Yogi,Matthew C I Medeiros,Anthony S Amend,Nicole A Hynson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

物种面积关系是描述生境增加与物种数量关系的经典生态规律。物种区域关系在植物和动物等微生物中是非常积极的,并且通过非排他性的随机和确定性过程出现,包括迁移和灭绝,漂移和环境异质性的变化。由于微生物生活方式的独特属性,它们可能不遵守与微生物相似的规则,特别是在空间尺度方面。我们预测,由于宿主的强大过滤作用,宿主相关的微生物组将比自由生活的微生物组表现出更浅的物种区域关系,而细菌的物种区域关系将比真菌浅,主要是由于扩散能力的差异。我们在一个相对简单的野外系统中测试了这些预测,在这个系统中,凤梨属植物包括支持无脊椎动物和环境基质(如碎屑)的水生生态系统。更大的植物端层产生更大的栖息地岛,使我们能够明确地研究它们的物种区域关系。我们发现,自由生活和宿主相关微生物组的物种区域关系不同,微生物组成员的物种区域关系也不同。通过评估环境条件与丰富度之间的关系,并测量跨尺度的多样性,我们假设这些观察到的物种区域关系差异归因于微生物之间实现的生态位和扩散能力的差异。这些发现强调了经典的生物空间尺度规律并不一定能准确地代表微生物组,并且对于某些微生物组和微生物来说,面积对多样性的影响似乎比其他微生物组更重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Microbiome spatial scaling varies among members, hosts, and environments across model island ecosystems.
The species area relationship is a classic ecological law describing the relationship between habitat increase and the number of species. Species area relationships are resoundingly positive across macrobes such as plants and animals, and emerge through non-exclusive stochastic and deterministic processes including changes in immigration and extinction, drift, and environmental heterogeneity. Due to unique attributes of the microbial lifestyle, they may not abide by similar rules as macrobes, especially when it comes to spatial scaling. We predict that host-associated microbiomes will exhibit shallower species area relationships than free-living microbiomes due to strong host filtering, and that the species area relationships of bacteria will be shallower than fungi due primarily to differences in dispersal ability. We test these predictions in a relatively simple field system where bromeliad phytotelmata comprise aquatic ecosystems that support invertebrates and environmental substrates such as detritus. Larger phytotelmata generate larger habitat islands for microbiomes allowing us to explicitly examine their species area relationships. We find that the species area relationships of free-living and host-associated microbiomes differ, as do those of microbiome members. By assessing the relationship between environmental conditions and richness, and measuring diversity across scales, we posit that these observed differences in species area relationships are owed to differences in realized niches and dispersal abilities among microbes. These findings highlight that the classic laws of biological spatial scaling do not necessarily accurately represent microbiomes, and that the influence of area on diversity appears to be more important for some microbiomes and microbes than others.
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