The predictive power of phylogeny on growth rates in soil bacterial communities

Author:

Walkup Jeth1ORCID,Dang Chansotheary1,Mau Rebecca L2,Hayer Michaela2ORCID,Schwartz Egbert23,Stone Bram W4,Hofmockel Kirsten S4ORCID,Koch Benjamin J23ORCID,Purcell Alicia M25,Pett-Ridge Jennifer67ORCID,Wang Chao8,Hungate Bruce A23ORCID,Morrissey Ember M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Division of Plant and Soil Sciences, West Virginia University , Morgantown, WV 26506, USA

2. Center for Ecosystem Science and Society (Ecoss), Northern Arizona University , Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA

3. Department of Biological Sciences, Northern Arizona University , Flagstaff, AZ 86011, USA

4. Earth and Biological Sciences Directorate, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory , Richland, WA 99354, USA

5. Department of Biological Sciences, Texas Tech University , Lubbock, TX 79409, USA

6. Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Physical and Life Science Directorate , Livermore, CA, USA

7. University of California Merced, Life & Environmental Sciences Department , Merced, CA 95343, USA

8. CAS Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Management, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , Shenyang, LN, China

Abstract

Abstract Predicting ecosystem function is critical to assess and mitigate the impacts of climate change. Quantitative predictions of microbially mediated ecosystem processes are typically uninformed by microbial biodiversity. Yet new tools allow the measurement of taxon-specific traits within natural microbial communities. There is mounting evidence of a phylogenetic signal in these traits, which may support prediction and microbiome management frameworks. We investigated phylogeny-based trait prediction using bacterial growth rates from soil communities in Arctic, boreal, temperate, and tropical ecosystems. Here we show that phylogeny predicts growth rates of soil bacteria, explaining an average of 31%, and up to 58%, of the variation within ecosystems. Despite limited overlap in community composition across these ecosystems, shared nodes in the phylogeny enabled ancestral trait reconstruction and cross-ecosystem predictions. Phylogenetic relationships could explain up to 38% (averaging 14%) of the variation in growth rates across the highly disparate ecosystems studied. Our results suggest that shared evolutionary history contributes to similarity in the relative growth rates of related bacteria in the wild, allowing phylogeny-based predictions to explain a substantial amount of the variation in taxon-specific functional traits, within and across ecosystems.

Funder

U.S. Department of Energy

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Medicine

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