The ecological assembly of bacterial communities in Antarctic wetlands varies across levels of phylogenetic resolution

As functional traits are conserved at different phylogenetic depths, the ability to detect community assembly processes can be conditional on the phylogenetic resolution; yet most previous work quantifying their influence has focused on a single level of phylogenetic resolution. Here, we have studie...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Environmental Microbiology
Main Authors: Quiroga, Maria V., Valverde, Angel, Mataloni, Gabriela, Casa, Valeria, Stegen, James C., Cowan, Don A.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2022
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2263/84460
https://doi.org/10.1111/1462-2920.15912
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Summary:As functional traits are conserved at different phylogenetic depths, the ability to detect community assembly processes can be conditional on the phylogenetic resolution; yet most previous work quantifying their influence has focused on a single level of phylogenetic resolution. Here, we have studied the ecological assembly of bacterial communities from an Antarctic wetland complex, applying null models across different levels of phylogenetic resolution (i.e. clustering ASVs into OTUs with decreasing sequence identity thresholds). We found that the relative influence of the community assembly processes varies with phylogenetic resolution. More specifically, selection processes seem to impose stronger influence at finer (100% sequence similarity ASV) than at coarser (99%–97% sequence similarity OTUs) resolution. We identified environmental features related with the ecological processes and propose a conceptual model for the bacterial community assembly in this Antarctic ecosystem. Briefly, eco-evolutionary processes appear to be leading to different but very closely related ASVs in lotic, lentic and terrestrial environments. In all, this study shows that assessing community assembly processes at different phylogenetic resolutions is key to improve our understanding of microbial ecology. More importantly, a failure to detect selection processes at coarser phylogenetic resolution does not imply the absence of such processes at finer resolutions. ANPCyT - Argentina; European Union; Junta de Castilla y León; NRF - South Africa and U.S. Department of Energy-BER program. https://sfamjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/14622920 hj2022 Biochemistry Genetics Microbiology and Plant Pathology