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Neutral mechanisms and niche differentiation in steady-state insular microbial communities revealed by single cell analysis
Authors:Zishu Liu  Nicolas Cichocki  Thomas Hübschmann  Christine Süring  Irina Dana Ofiţeru  William T. Sloan  Volker Grimm  Susann Müller
Affiliation:1. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ, Department of Environmental Microbiology, Permoserstraße 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany;2. School of Engineering, Environmental Engineering, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU UK;3. Department of Civil Engineering, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, G12 8LT UK;4. Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research-UFZ, Department of Ecological Modeling, Permoserstraße 15, 04318 Leipzig, Germany
Abstract:In completely insular microbial communities, evolution of community structure cannot be shaped by the immigration of new members. In addition, when those communities are run in steady state, the influence of environmental factors on their assembly is reduced. Therefore, one would expect similar community structures under steady-state conditions. Yet, in parallel setups, variability does occur. To reveal ecological mechanisms behind this phenomenon, five parallel reactors were studied at the single-cell level for about 100 generations and community structure variations were quantified by ecological measures. Whether community variability can be controlled was tested by implementing soft temperature stressors as potential synchronizers. The low slope of the lognormal rank-order abundance curves indicated a predominance of neutral mechanisms, i.e., where species identity plays no role. Variations in abundance ranks of subcommunities and increase in inter-community pairwise β-diversity over time support this. Niche differentiation was also observed, as indicated by steeper geometric-like rank-order abundance curves and increased numbers of correlations between abiotic and biotic parameters during initial adaptation and after disturbances. Still, neutral forces dominated community assembly. Our findings suggest that complex microbial communities in insular steady-state environments can be difficult to synchronize and maintained in their original or desired structure, as they are non-equilibrium systems.
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