4.7 Article

Bacterioplankton Assembly Along a Eutrophication Gradient Is Mainly Structured by Environmental Filtering, Including Indirect Effects of Phytoplankton Composition

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-022-01994-x

Keywords

Bacterioplankton; Eutrophication; Community assembly; Biotic factors

Funding

  1. ERA-Net BiodivERsA project TippingPond
  2. KU Leuven Research Fund excellence center [PF/2010/07]
  3. Science Without Borders program [245968/2012-1]
  4. Belspo

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This study evaluated the importance of deterministic and stochastic processes in shaping bacterioplankton community assembly and the impacts of phytoplankton and zooplankton on bacterioplankton through direct and indirect effects. The results showed that environmental variation is a key driver of bacterioplankton assembly, and indirect biotic interactions also play a significant role. Additionally, eutrophication led to differentiation in community structure and increased bacterial diversity.
Biotic interactions are suggested to be key factors structuring bacterioplankton community assembly but are rarely included in metacommunity studies. Eutrophication of ponds and lakes provides a useful opportunity to evaluate how bacterioplankton assembly is affected by specific environmental conditions, especially also by biotic interactions with other trophic levels such as phytoplankton and zooplankton. Here, we evaluated the importance of deterministic and stochastic processes on bacterioplankton community assembly in 35 shallow ponds along a eutrophication gradient in Belgium and assessed the direct and indirect effects of phytoplankton and zooplankton community variation on bacterioplankton assembly through a path analysis and network analysis. Environmental filtering by abiotic factors (suspended matter concentration and pH) explained the largest part of the bacterioplankton community variation. Phytoplankton community structure affected bacterioplankton structure through its effect on variation in chlorophyll-a and suspended matter concentration. Bacterioplankton communities were also spatially structured through pH. Overall, our results indicate that environmental variation is a key component driving bacterioplankton assembly along a eutrophication gradient and that indirect biotic interactions can also be important in explaining bacterioplankton community composition. Furthermore, eutrophication led to divergence in community structure and more eutrophic ponds had a higher diversity of bacteria.

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