Islands in the sand: are all hypolithic microbial communities the same?

Author:

Lebre Pedro H1,Bottos Eric2,Makhalanyane Thulani P1ORCID,Hogg Ian3,Cowan Don A1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Microbial Ecology and Genomic, Department of Biochemistry, Genetics and Microbiology, University of Pretoria, Lynwood Road, Hatfield, Pretoria, 0028, South Africa

2. Department of Biological Sciences, Thompson Rivers University, 805 TRU Way, Kamloops, British Colombia, BC V2C 0C8, Canada

3. Canadian High Arctic Research Station, rue Uvajuq place, Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, CP 2150, Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACT Hypolithic microbial communities (hypolithons) are complex assemblages of phototrophic and heterotrophic organisms associated with the ventral surfaces of translucent minerals embedded in soil surfaces. Past studies on the assembly, structure and function of hypolithic communities have tended to use composite samples (i.e. bulked hypolithic biomass) with the underlying assumption that samples collected from within a ‘homogeneous’ locality are phylogenetically homogeneous. In this study, we question this assumption by analysing the prokaryote phylogenetic diversity of multiple individual hypolithons: i.e. asking the seemingly simple question of ‘Are all hypolithons the same’? Using 16S rRNA gene-based phylogenetic analysis of hypolithons recovered for a localized moraine region in the Taylor Valley, McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, we demonstrate that these communities are heterogeneous at very small spatial scales (<5 m). Using null models of phylogenetic turnover, we showed that this heterogeneity between hypolithons is probably due to stochastic effects such as dispersal limitations, which is entirely consistent with the physically isolated nature of the hypolithic communities (‘islands in the sand’) and the almost complete absence of a liquid continuum as a mode of microbial transport between communities.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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