首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Natural experiments and long-term monitoring are critical to understand and predict marine host–microbe ecology and evolution
Authors:Matthieu Leray  Laetitia G E Wilkins  Amy Apprill  Holly M Bik  Friederike Clever  Sean R Connolly  Marina E De Len  J Emmett Duffy  Leïla Ezzat  Sarah Gignoux-Wolfsohn  Edward Allen Herre  Jonathan Z Kaye  David I Kline  Jordan G Kueneman  Melissa K McCormick  W Owen McMillan  Aaron O&#x;Dea  Tiago J Pereira  Jillian M Petersen  Daniel F Petticord  Mark E Torchin  Rebecca Vega Thurber  Elin Videvall  William T Wcislo  Benedict Yuen  Jonathan A Eisen
Abstract:Marine multicellular organisms host a diverse collection of bacteria, archaea, microbial eukaryotes, and viruses that form their microbiome. Such host-associated microbes can significantly influence the host’s physiological capacities; however, the identity and functional role(s) of key members of the microbiome (“core microbiome”) in most marine hosts coexisting in natural settings remain obscure. Also unclear is how dynamic interactions between hosts and the immense standing pool of microbial genetic variation will affect marine ecosystems’ capacity to adjust to environmental changes. Here, we argue that significantly advancing our understanding of how host-associated microbes shape marine hosts’ plastic and adaptive responses to environmental change requires (i) recognizing that individual host–microbe systems do not exist in an ecological or evolutionary vacuum and (ii) expanding the field toward long-term, multidisciplinary research on entire communities of hosts and microbes. Natural experiments, such as time-calibrated geological events associated with well-characterized environmental gradients, provide unique ecological and evolutionary contexts to address this challenge. We focus here particularly on mutualistic interactions between hosts and microbes, but note that many of the same lessons and approaches would apply to other types of interactions.

This Essay argues that in order to truly understand how marine hosts benefit from the immense diversity of microbes, we need to expand towards long-term, multi-disciplinary research focussing on few areas of the world’s ocean that we refer to as “natural experiments,” where processes can be studied at scales that far exceed those captured in laboratory experiments.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号