Microeukaryote community coalescence strengthens community stability and elevates diversity
Artikel i vetenskaplig tidskrift, 2024

Mixing of entire microbial communities represents a frequent, yet understudied phenomenon. Here, we mimicked estuarine condition in a microcosm experiment by mixing a freshwater river community with a brackish sea community and assessed the effects of both environmental and community coalescences induced by varying mixing processes on microeukaryotic communities. Signs of shifted community composition of coalesced communities towards the sea parent community suggest asymmetrical community coalescence outcome, which, in addition, was generally less impacted by environmental coalescence. Community stability, inferred from community cohesion, differed among river and sea parent communities, and increased following coalescence treatments. Generally, community coalescence increased alpha diversity and promoted competition from the introduction (or emergence) of additional (or rare) species. These competitive interactions in turn had community stabilizing effect as evidenced by the increased proportion of negative cohesion. The fate of microeukaryotes was influenced by mixing ratios and frequencies (i.e. one-time versus repeated coalescence). Namely, diatoms were negatively impacted by coalescence, while fungi, ciliates, and cercozoans were promoted to varying extents, depending on the mixing ratios of the parent communities. Our study suggests that the predictability of coalescence outcomes was greater when the sea parent community dominated the final community, and this predictability was further enhanced when communities collided repeatedly.

cohesion

community stability

biotic interactions

coastal habitats

community mixing

long-read metabarcoding

Författare

Máté Vass

Umeå universitet

Chalmers, Life sciences, Systembiologi

Anna J. Székely

Sveriges lantbruksuniversitet (SLU)

Ulla Carlsson-Graner

Umeå universitet

Johan Wikner

Umeå universitet

Arne Andersson

Umeå universitet

FEMS microbiology ecology

01686496 (ISSN) 15746941 (eISSN)

Vol. 100 8 fiae100

Ämneskategorier (SSIF 2011)

Ekologi

Sannolikhetsteori och statistik

DOI

10.1093/femsec/fiae100

PubMed

39003240

Mer information

Senast uppdaterat

2024-08-08