微生物群
生物多样性
生物
分类单元
生态学
生态系统
梯形物种
生态演替
基因组
微生物生态学
进化生物学
细菌
古生物学
生物信息学
生物化学
基因
作者
Amanda H. Rawstern,Damian J. Hernandez,Michelle E. Afkhami
摘要
Microorganisms underpin numerous ecosystem processes and support biodiversity globally. Yet, we understand surprisingly little about what structures environmental microbiomes, including how to efficiently identify key players. Microbiome network theory predicts that highly connected hubs act as keystones, but this has never been empirically tested in nature. Combining culturing, sequencing, networks and field experiments, we isolated 'central' (highly connected, hub taxa), 'intermediate' (moderately connected), and 'peripheral' (weakly/unconnected) microbes and experimentally evaluated their effects on soil microbiome assembly during early succession in nature. Central early colonisers significantly (1) enhanced biodiversity (35%-40% richer communities), (2) reshaped trajectories of microbiome assembly and (3) increased recruitment of additional influential microbes by > 60%. In contrast, peripheral microbes did not increase diversity and were transient taxa, minimally affected by the presence of other microbes. This work elucidates fundamental principles of network theory in microbial ecology and demonstrates for the first time in nature that central microbes act as keystone taxa.
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