Strong dispersal limitation of microbial communities at Shackleton Glacier, Antarctica

dc.contributor.author Lemoine, Nathan P.
dc.contributor.author Adams, Byron J.
dc.contributor.author Diaz, Melisa
dc.contributor.author Dragone, Nicholas B.
dc.contributor.author Franco, André L. C.
dc.contributor.author Fierer, Noah
dc.contributor.author Lyons, W Berry
dc.contributor.author Hogg, Ian D.
dc.contributor.author Wall, Diana H.
dc.date.accessioned 2023-09-21T18:53:44Z
dc.date.available 2023-09-21T18:53:44Z
dc.date.issued 2023-01-31
dc.description © The Author(s), 2023. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. The definitive version was published in Lemoine, N., Adams, B., Diaz, M., Dragone, N., Franco, A., Fierer, N., Lyons, W., Hogg, I., & Wall, D. Strong dispersal limitation of microbial communities at Shackleton Glacier, Antarctica. MSystems, 8(1), (2023): e01254–22, https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01254-22.
dc.description.abstract Microbial communities can be structured by both deterministic and stochastic processes, but the relative importance of these processes remains unknown. The ambiguity partly arises from an inability to disentangle soil microbial processes from confounding factors, such as aboveground plant communities or anthropogenic disturbance. In this study, we characterized the relative contributions of determinism and stochasticity to assembly processes of soil bacterial communities across a large environmental gradient of undisturbed Antarctic soils. We hypothesized that harsh soils would impose a strong environmental selection on microbial communities, whereas communities in benign soils would be structured largely by dispersal. Contrary to our expectations, dispersal was the dominant assembly mechanism across the entire soil environmental gradient, including benign environments. The microbial community composition reflects slowly changing soil conditions and dispersal limitation of isolated sites. Thus, stochastic processes, as opposed to deterministic, are primary drivers of soil ecosystem assembly across space at our study site. This is especially surprising given the strong environmental constraints on soil microorganisms in one of the harshest environments on the planet, suggesting that dispersal could be a driving force in microbial community assembly in soils worldwide.Because of their diversity and ubiquity, microbes provide an excellent means to tease apart how natural communities are structured. In general, ecologists believe that stochastic assembly processes, like random drift and dispersal, should dominate in benign environments while deterministic processes, like environmental filtering, should be prevalent in harsh environments. To help resolve this debate, we analyzed microbial community composition in pristine Antarctic soils devoid of human influence or plant communities for eons. Our results demonstrate that dispersal limitation is a surprisingly potent force of community limitation throughout all soil conditions. Thus, dispersal appears to be a driving force of microbial community assembly, even in the harshest of conditions.
dc.description.sponsorship This work was supported by the following awards: National Science Foundation – Office of Polar Programs 1341631 (W.B.L.); National Science Foundation – Office of Polar Programs 1341648 (D.H.W.); National Science Foundation – Office of Polar Programs 1341629 (N.F.); National Science Foundation – Office of Polar Programs 1341736 (B.J.A.); National Science Foundation – Office of Polar Programs 1043681 (Polar Geospatial Center); National Science Foundation – Office of Polar Programs 1559691 (Polar Geospatial Center); National Science Foundation – Division of Environmental Biology 1941390 (N.P.L.); National Science Foundation – Graduate Research Fellowship 60041697 (M.A.D.).
dc.identifier.citation Lemoine, N., Adams, B., Diaz, M., Dragone, N., Franco, A., Fierer, N., Lyons, W., Hogg, I., & Wall, D. (2023). Strong dispersal limitation of microbial communities at Shackleton Glacier, Antarctica. MSystems, 8(1), e01254–22.
dc.identifier.doi 10.1128/msystems.01254-22
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/1912/66860
dc.publisher American Society for Microbiology
dc.relation.uri https://doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01254-22
dc.rights Attribution 4.0 International *
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ *
dc.subject Community assembly
dc.subject Stochasticity
dc.subject Determinism
dc.subject Niche
dc.subject Dispersal
dc.title Strong dispersal limitation of microbial communities at Shackleton Glacier, Antarctica
dc.type Article
dspace.entity.type Publication
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