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Environmental stress destabilizes microbial networks
Authors:Damian J Hernandez  Aaron S David  Eric S Menges  Christopher A Searcy  Michelle E Afkhami
Institution:1.Department of Biology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33146 USA ;2.USDA-ARS, Invasive Plant Research Laboratory, Fort Lauderdale, FL 33314 USA ;3.Archbold Biological Station, Venus, FL 33960 USA
Abstract:Environmental stress is increasing worldwide, yet we lack a clear picture of how stress disrupts the stability of microbial communities and the ecosystem services they provide. Here, we present the first evidence that naturally-occurring microbiomes display network properties characteristic of unstable communities when under persistent stress. By assessing changes in diversity and structure of soil microbiomes along 40 replicate stress gradients (elevation/water availability gradients) in the Florida scrub ecosystem, we show that: (1) prokaryotic and fungal diversity decline in high stress, and (2) two network properties of stable microbial communities—modularity and negative:positive cohesion—have a clear negative relationship with environmental stress, explaining 51–78% of their variation. Interestingly, pathogenic taxa/functional guilds decreased in relative abundance along the stress gradient, while oligotrophs and mutualists increased, suggesting that the shift in negative:positive cohesion could result from decreasing negative:positive biotic interactions consistent with the predictions of the Stress Gradient Hypothesis. Given the crucial role microbiomes play in ecosystem functions, our results suggest that, by limiting the compartmentalization of microbial associations and creating communities dominated by positive associations, increasing stress in the Anthropocene could destabilize microbiomes and undermine their ecosystem services.Subject terms: Microbial ecology, Microbial ecology
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