Author:
Ramond Pierre,Siano Raffaele,Sourisseau Marc,Logares Ramiro
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The mechanisms shaping the rare microbial biosphere and its role in ecosystems remain unclear. We developed an approach to study ecological patterns in the rare biosphere and use it on a vast collection of marine microbiomes, sampled in coastal ecosystems at a regional scale. We study the assembly processes, and the ecological strategies constituting the rare protistan biosphere. Using the phylogeny and morpho-trophic traits of these protists, we also explore their functional potential.
Results
Taxonomic community composition remained stable along rank abundance curves. Conditionally rare taxa, driven by selection processes, and transiently rare taxa, with stochastic distributions, were evidenced along the rank abundance curves of all size-fractions. Specific taxa within the divisions Sagenista, Picozoa, Telonemia, and Choanoflagellida were rare across time and space. The distribution of traits along rank abundance curves outlined a high functional redundancy between rare and abundant protists. Nevertheless, trophic traits illustrated an interplay between the trophic groups of different size-fractions.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that rare and abundant protists are evolutionary closely related, most notably due to the high microdiversity found in the rare biosphere. We evidenced a succession of assembly processes and strategies of rarity along rank abundance curves that we hypothesize to be common to most microbiomes at the regional scale. Despite high functional redundancy in the rare protistan biosphere, permanently rare protists were evidenced, and they could play critical functions as bacterivores and decomposers from within the rare biosphere. Finally, changes in the composition of the rare protistan biosphere could be influenced by the trophic regime of aquatic ecosystems. Our work contributes to understanding the role of rare protists in microbiomes.
Funder
Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Genetics,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Microbiology
Reference84 articles.
1. Pedròs-Aliò C. The rare bacterial biosphere. Ann Rev Mar Sci. 2012;4:449–66.
2. Logares R, Mangot J-F, Massana R. Rarity in aquatic microbes: placing protists on the map. Res Microbiol [Internet]. 2015;1–11. Available from: http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0923250815001655.
3. Jousset A, Bienhold C, Chatzinotas A, Gallien L, Gobet A, Kurm V, et al. Where less may be more: how the rare biosphere pulls ecosystems strings. ISME J. 2017;11:853–62.
4. Pascoal F, Costa R, Magalhães C. The microbial rare biosphere: current concepts, methods and ecological principles. FEMS Microbiol Ecol. 2021;97:1–15.
5. Jia X, Dini-Andreote F, Falcão Salles J. Community Assembly Processes of the Microbial Rare Biosphere. Trends Microbiol [Internet]. Elsevier Ltd; 2018;26:738–47. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tim.2018.02.011.