4.5 Article

The selection of copiotrophs may complicate biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships in microbial dilution-to-extinction experiments

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOME
Volume 18, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40793-023-00478-w

Keywords

Dilution-to-extinction; Community assembly processes; Biodiversity-ecosystem functioning

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The relationships between biodiversity and ecosystem functioning in microbial communities have been found to be influenced by the abundance of rare species and high-abundance species. The manipulation of microbial diversity using the dilution-to-extinction method has become popular for exploring these relationships. Our study found that the assembly processes of microbial communities in dilution-to-extinction experiments have a significant impact on the biodiversity-ecosystem functioning relationships.
The relationships between biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) for microbial communities are poorly understood despite the important roles of microbes acting in natural ecosystems. Dilution-to-extinction (DTE), a method to manipulate microbial diversity, helps to fill the knowledge gap of microbial BEF relationships and has recently become more popular with the development of high-throughput sequencing techniques. However, the pattern of community assembly processes in DTE experiments is less explored and blocks our further understanding of BEF relationships in DTE studies. Here, a microcosm study and a meta-analysis of DTE studies were carried out to explore the dominant community assembly processes and their potential effect on exploring BEF relationships. While stochastic processes were dominant at low dilution levels due to the high number of rare species, the deterministic processes became stronger at a higher dilution level because the microbial copiotrophs were selected during the regrowth phase and rare species were lost. From the view of microbial functional performances, specialized functions, commonly carried by rare species, are more likely to be impaired in DTE experiments while the broad functions seem to be less impacted due to the good performance of copiotrophs. Our study indicated that shifts in the prokaryotic community and its assembly processes induced by dilutions result in more complex BEF relationships in DTE experiments. Specialized microbial functions could be better used for defining BEF. Our findings may be helpful for future studies to design, explore, and interpret microbial BEF relationships using DTE.

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