Latent functional diversity may accelerate microbial community responses to temperature fluctuations

Author:

Smith Thomas P1ORCID,Mombrikotb Shorok1,Ransome Emma1,Kontopoulos Dimitrios - Georgios23ORCID,Pawar Samraat1ORCID,Bell Thomas1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The Georgina Mace Centre for the Living Planet, Imperial College London

2. LOEWE Centre for Translational Biodiversity Genomics

3. Senckenberg Research Institute

Abstract

How complex microbial communities respond to climatic fluctuations remains an open question. Due to their relatively short generation times and high functional diversity, microbial populations harbor great potential to respond as a community through a combination of strain-level phenotypic plasticity, adaptation, and species sorting. However, the relative importance of these mechanisms remains unclear. We conducted a laboratory experiment to investigate the degree to which bacterial communities can respond to changes in environmental temperature through a combination of phenotypic plasticity and species sorting alone. We grew replicate soil communities from a single location at six temperatures between 4°C and 50°C. We found that phylogenetically and functionally distinct communities emerge at each of these temperatures, with K-strategist taxa favored under cooler conditions and r-strategist taxa under warmer conditions. We show that this dynamic emergence of distinct communities across a wide range of temperatures (in essence, community-level adaptation) is driven by the resuscitation of latent functional diversity: the parent community harbors multiple strains pre-adapted to different temperatures that are able to ‘switch on’ at their preferred temperature without immigration or adaptation. Our findings suggest that microbial community function in nature is likely to respond rapidly to climatic temperature fluctuations through shifts in species composition by resuscitation of latent functional diversity.

Funder

Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council

Natural Environment Research Council

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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