Warmer and drier ecosystems select for smaller bacterial genomes in global soils

Author:

Liu Hongwei1ORCID,Zhang Haiyang12,Powell Jeff1,Delgado‐Baquerizo Manuel34,Wang Juntao15,Singh Brajesh15

Affiliation:

1. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment Western Sydney University Penrith New South Wales Australia

2. College of Life Sciences Hebei University Baoding China

3. Laboratorio de Biodiversidad y Funcionamiento Ecosistemico Instituto de Recursos Naturales y Agrobiología de Sevilla (IRNAS), CSIC Sevilla Spain

4. Unidad Asociada CSIC‐UPO (BioFun) Universidad Pablo de Olavide Sevilla Spain

5. Global Centre for Land‐Based Innovation Western Sydney University Penrith New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractBacterial genome size reflects bacterial evolutionary processes and metabolic lifestyles, with implications for microbial community assembly and ecosystem functions. However, to understand the extent of genome‐mediated microbial responses to environmental selections, we require studies that observe genome size distributions along environmental gradients representing different conditions that soil bacteria normally encounter. In this study, we used surface soils collected from 237 sites across the globe and analyzed how environmental conditions (e.g., soil carbon and nutrients, aridity, pH, and temperature) affect soil bacterial occurrences and genome size at the community level using bacterial community profiling. We used a joint species distribution model to quantify the effects of environments on species occurrences and found that aridity was a major regulator of genome size with warmer and drier environments selecting bacteria with smaller genomes. Drought‐induced physiological constraints on bacterial growth (e.g., water scarcity for cell metabolisms) may have led to these correlations. This finding suggests that increasing cover by warmer and drier ecosystems may result in bacterial genome simplifications by a reduction of genome size.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Microbiology,Biotechnology

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