Journal
COLD SPRING HARBOR PERSPECTIVES IN BIOLOGY
Volume 7, Issue 10, Pages -Publisher
COLD SPRING HARBOR LAB PRESS, PUBLICATIONS DEPT
DOI: 10.1101/cshperspect.a018143
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Funding
- National Science Foundation [DEB 0821391]
- National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences [P30-ES002109]
- Moore Foundation
- Broad Institute's SPARC program
- Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
- Canada Research Chairs program
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What are species? How do they arise? These questions are not easy to answer and have been particularly controversial in microbiology. Yet, for those microbiologists studying environmental questions or dealing with clinical issues, the ability to name and recognize species, widely considered the fundamental units of ecology, can be practically useful. On a more fundamental level, the speciation problem, the focus here, is more mechanistic and conceptual. What is the origin of microbial species, and what evolutionary and ecological mechanisms keep them separate once they begin to diverge? To what extent are these mechanisms universal across diverse types of microbes, and more broadly across the entire the tree of life? Here, we propose that microbial speciation must be viewed in light of gene flow, which defines units of genetic similarity, and of natural selection, which defines units of phenotype and ecological function. We discuss to what extent ecological and genetic units overlap to form cohesive populations in the wild, based on recent evolutionary modeling and population genomics studies. These studies suggest a continuous speciation spectrum, which microbial populations traverse in different ways depending on their balance of gene flow and natural selection.
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