4.6 Article

Distinct community assembly processes underlie significant spatiotemporal dynamics of abundant and rare bacterioplankton in the Yangtze River

Journal

Publisher

HIGHER EDUCATION PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11783-021-1513-4

Keywords

Rare taxa; Biogeography; Community assembly; Bacterioplankton; The Yangtze River

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41907203]
  2. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2021T140010]
  3. Majorbio Company (Shanghai, China)

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This study investigated the biogeography and community assembly processes of abundant and rare bacterioplankton taxa in the Yangtze River. The results showed similar spatiotemporal patterns between the two taxa, but rare taxa were more influenced by season and landform. Rare taxa correlated with more environmental factors and had a lower proportion of community shifts explained by environmental and spatial factors compared to abundant taxa. The study also revealed that both taxa were mainly governed by stochastic processes, but dispersal limitation played a larger role in determining the abundances of abundant taxa.
The rare microbial biosphere provides broad ecological services and resilience to various ecosystems. Nevertheless, the biogeographical patterns and assembly processes of rare bacterioplankton communities in large rivers remain uncertain. In this study, we investigated the biogeography and community assembly processes of abundant and rare bacterioplankton taxa in the Yangtze River (China) covering a distance of 4300 km. The results revealed similar spatiotemporal patterns of abundant taxa (AT) and rare taxa (RT) at both taxonomic and phylogenetic levels, and analysis of similarities revealed that RT was significantly influenced by season and landform than AT. Furthermore, RT correlated with more environmental factors than AT, whereas environmental and spatial factors explained a lower proportion of community shifts in RT than in AT. The steeper distance-decay slopes in AT indicated higher spatial turnover rates of abundant subcommunities than rare subcommunities. The null model revealed that both AT and RT were mainly governed by stochastic processes. However, dispersal limitation primarily governed the AT, whereas the undominated process accounted for a higher fraction of stochastic processes in RT. River flow and suspended solids mediated the balance between the stochastic and deterministic processes in RT. The spatiotemporal dynamics and assembly processes of total taxa were more similar as AT than RT. This study provides new insights into both significant spatiotemporal dynamics and inconsistent assembly processes of AT and RT in large rivers. (C) Higher Education Press 2021

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