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Spatial patterns of bacterial taxa in nature reflect ecological traits of deep branches of the 16S rRNA bacterial tree
Authors:Laurent Philippot  David Bru  Nicolas P. A. Saby  Jiří Čuhel  Dominique Arrouays  Miloslav Šimek  Sara Hallin
Affiliation:1. INRA, UMR 1229, F‐21000 Dijon, France.;2. University of Burgundy, UMR 1229, F‐21000 Dijon, France.;3. INRA, Centre de Recherche d'Orléans, US 1106, INFOSOL Unit, BP 20619 Ardon – 45166, Olivet cedex, France.;4. Biology Centre, Institute of Soil Biology and University of South Bohemia – Faculty of Science, Na Sádkách 7, 370 05 ?eské Budějovice, Czech Republic.;5. Department of Microbiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Box 7025, 750 07 Uppsala, Sweden.
Abstract:Whether bacteria display spatial patterns of distribution and at which level of taxonomic organization such patterns can be observed are central questions in microbial ecology. Here we investigated how the total and relative abundances of eight bacterial taxa at the phylum or class level were spatially distributed in a pasture by using quantitative PCR and geostatistical modelling. The distributions of the relative abundance of most taxa varied by a factor of 2.5–6.5 and displayed strong spatial patterns at the field scale. These spatial patterns were taxon‐specific and correlated to soil properties, which indicates that members of a bacterial clade defined at high taxonomical levels shared specific ecological traits in the pasture. Ecologically meaningful assemblages of bacteria at the phylum or class level in the environment provides evidence that deep branching patterns of the 16S rRNA bacterial tree are actually mirrored in nature.
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