4.7 Article

Linking metagenomics to aquatic microbial ecology and biogeochemical cycles

Journal

LIMNOLOGY AND OCEANOGRAPHY
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages S2-S20

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/lno.11382

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Canadian National Sciences and Engineering Research Council Discovery program
  2. United States National Science Foundation Long-Term Ecological Research Program [NTL-LTER DEB-1440297]
  3. Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation
  4. EU project SINGEK [H2020-MSCA-ITN-2015-675752]
  5. Spanish project ALLFLAGS (MINECO) [CTM2016-75083-R]
  6. German Ministry of Education and Science (BMBF) [01LC1501G]
  7. DFG project Microprime [GR 1540/23-1]
  8. DFG project APPS [GR 1540/30-1]
  9. Canadian National Sciences and Engineering Research Council Canada Research Chair program

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Microbial communities are essential components of aquatic ecosystems through their contribution to food web dynamics and biogeochemical processes. Aquatic microbial diversity is immense and a general challenge is to understand how metabolism and interactions of single organisms shape microbial community dynamics and ecosystem-scale biogeochemical transformations. Metagenomic approaches have developed rapidly, and proven to be powerful in linking microbial community dynamics to biogeochemical processes. In this review, we provide an overview of metagenomic approaches, followed by a discussion on some recent insights they have provided, including those in this special issue. These include the discovery of new taxa and metabolisms in aquatic microbiomes, insights into community assembly and functional ecology as well as evolutionary processes shaping microbial genomes and microbiomes, and the influence of human activities on aquatic microbiomes. Given that metagenomics can now be considered a mature technology where data generation and descriptive analyses are relatively routine and informative, we then discuss metagenomic-enabled research avenues to further link microbial dynamics to biogeochemical processes. These include the integration of metagenomics into well-designed ecological experiments, the use of metagenomics to inform and validate metabolic and biogeochemical models, and the pressing need for ecologically relevant model organisms and simple microbial systems to better interpret the taxonomic and functional information integrated in metagenomes. These research avenues will contribute to a more mechanistic and predictive understanding of links between microbial dynamics and biogeochemical cycles. Owing to rapid climate change and human impacts on aquatic ecosystems, the urgency of such an understanding has never been greater.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available