Soil Bacterial Communities Exhibit Strong Biogeographic Patterns at Fine Taxonomic Resolution

被引:36
作者
Bay, Sean K. [1 ,2 ]
McGeoch, Melodie A. [1 ]
Gillor, Osnat [3 ]
Wieler, Nimrod [3 ]
Palmer, David J. [1 ]
Baker, David J. [1 ]
Chown, Steven L. [1 ]
Greening, Chris [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Monash Univ, Sch Biol Sci, Clayton, Vic, Australia
[2] Biomed Discovery Inst, Dept Microbiol, Clayton, Vic, Australia
[3] Ben Gurion Univ Negev, Zuckerberg Inst Water Res, Blaustein Inst Desert Res, Sede Boqer, Israel
基金
澳大利亚国家健康与医学研究理事会;
关键词
biogeography; desert; soil bacteria; turnover; zeta diversity; TAXA-AREA RELATIONSHIPS; BETA-DIVERSITY; DISTANCE-DECAY; SPATIAL AUTOCORRELATION; DETERMINISTIC PROCESSES; SPECIES-DIVERSITY; ZETA DIVERSITY; DRIVERS; FUNGAL; ASSEMBLAGES;
D O I
10.1128/mSystems.00540-20
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Bacteria have been inferred to exhibit relatively weak biogeographic patterns. To what extent such findings reflect true biological phenomena or methodological artifacts remains unclear. Here, we addressed this question by analyzing the turnover of soil bacterial communities from three data sets. We applied three methodological innovations: (i) design of a hierarchical sampling scheme to disentangle environmental from spatial factors driving turnover; (ii) resolution of 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequence variants to enable higher-resolution community profiling; and (iii) application of the new metric zeta diversity to analyze multisite turnover and drivers. At fine taxonomic resolution, rapid compositional turnover was observed across multiple spatial scales. Turnover was overwhelmingly driven by deterministic processes and influenced by the rare biosphere. The communities also exhibited strong distance decay patterns and taxon-area relationships, with z values within the interquartile range reported for macroorganisms. These biogeographical patterns were weakened upon applying two standard approaches to process community sequencing data: clustering sequences at 97% identity threshold and/or filtering the rare biosphere (sequences lower than 0.05% relative abundance). Comparable findings were made across local, regional, and global data sets and when using shotgun metagenomic markers. Altogether, these findings suggest that bacteria exhibit strong biogeographic patterns, but these signals can be obscured by methodological limitations. We advocate various innovations, including using zeta diversity, to advance the study of microbial biogeography. IMPORTANCE It is commonly thought that bacterial distributions show lower spatial variation than for multicellular organisms. In this article, we present evidence that these inferences are artifacts caused by methodological limitations. Through leveraging innovations in sampling design, sequence processing, and diversity analysis, we provide multifaceted evidence that bacterial communities in fact exhibit strong distribution patterns. This is driven by selection due to factors such as local soil characteristics. Altogether, these findings suggest that the processes underpinning diversity patterns are more unified across all domains of life than previously thought, which has broad implications for the understanding and management of soil biodiversity.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 103 条
  • [31] The diversity and biogeography of soil bacterial communities
    Fierer, N
    Jackson, RB
    [J]. PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (03) : 626 - 631
  • [32] Embracing the unknown: disentangling the complexities of the soil microbiome
    Fierer, Noah
    [J]. NATURE REVIEWS MICROBIOLOGY, 2017, 15 (10) : 579 - 590
  • [33] Global patterns in belowground communities
    Fierer, Noah
    Strickland, Michael S.
    Liptzin, Daniel
    Bradford, Mark A.
    Cleveland, Cory C.
    [J]. ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2009, 12 (11) : 1238 - 1249
  • [34] The Earth Microbiome project: successes and aspirations
    Gilbert, Jack A.
    Jansson, Janet K.
    Knight, Rob
    [J]. BMC BIOLOGY, 2014, 12
  • [35] Uncovering the Metabolic Strategies of the Dormant Microbial Majority: towards Integrative Approaches
    Greening, Chris
    Grinter, Rhys
    Chiri, Eleonora
    [J]. MSYSTEMS, 2019, 4 (03)
  • [36] Beyond biogeographic patterns: processes shaping the microbial landscape
    Hanson, China A.
    Fuhrman, Jed A.
    Horner-Devine, M. Claire
    Martiny, Jennifer B. H.
    [J]. NATURE REVIEWS MICROBIOLOGY, 2012, 10 (07) : 497 - 506
  • [37] Perspectives on the Impact of Sampling Design and Intensity on Soil Microbial Diversity Estimates
    Hermans, Syrie M.
    Buckley, Hannah L.
    Lear, Gavin
    [J]. FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [38] A taxa-area relationship for bacteria
    Horner-Devine, MC
    Lage, M
    Hughes, JB
    Bohannan, BJM
    [J]. NATURE, 2004, 432 (7018) : 750 - 753
  • [39] Quantifying multiple-site compositional turnover in an Afrotemperate forest, using zeta diversity
    Hui, Cang
    Vermeulen, Wessel
    Durrheim, Graham
    [J]. FOREST ECOSYSTEMS, 2018, 5
  • [40] Zeta Diversity as a Concept and Metric That Unifies Incidence-Based Biodiversity Patterns
    Hui, Cang
    McGeoch, Melodie A.
    [J]. AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2014, 184 (05) : 684 - 694