4.6 Article

The Eco-Evo Mandala: Simplifying Bacterioplankton Complexity into Ecohealth Signatures

期刊

ENTROPY
卷 23, 期 11, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/e23111471

关键词

marine microbiome; ecosystem health; biocomplexity; optimality; biogeochemical forcing; climate change; Mandala

资金

  1. Hokkaido University

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Analyzing bacterioplankton data from different habitats within the Great Barrier Reef, it was found that microbial communities exhibited varying degrees of deviations from theoretical optimality, mainly due to structural and functional traits related to bacterioplankton abundance and interaction distributions. Dominant populations such as Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Cyanobacteria were identified as having a large functional gene repertoire, contributing to community patterns and increasing resilience in the microbiome. The Eco-Evo Mandala highlighted the importance of habitat and microbiome interaction network topology in evaluating ecosystem health, emphasizing the impact on interactions rather than taxonomic species richness.
The microbiome emits informative signals of biological organization and environmental pressure that aid ecosystem monitoring and prediction. Are the many signals reducible to a habitat-specific portfolio that characterizes ecosystem health? Does an optimally structured microbiome imply a resilient microbiome? To answer these questions, we applied our novel Eco-Evo Mandala to bacterioplankton data from four habitats within the Great Barrier Reef, to explore how patterns in community structure, function and genetics signal habitat-specific organization and departures from theoretical optimality. The Mandala revealed communities departing from optimality in habitat-specific ways, mostly along structural and functional traits related to bacterioplankton abundance and interaction distributions (reflected by epsilon and lambda as power law and exponential distribution parameters), which are not linearly associated with each other. River and reef communities were similar in their relatively low abundance and interaction disorganization (low epsilon and lambda) due to their protective structured habitats. On the contrary, lagoon and estuarine inshore reefs appeared the most disorganized due to the ocean temperature and biogeochemical stress. Phylogenetic distances (D) were minimally informative in characterizing bacterioplankton organization. However, dominant populations, such as Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, and Cyanobacteria, were largely responsible for community patterns, being generalists with a large functional gene repertoire (high D) that increases resilience. The relative balance of these populations was found to be habitat-specific and likely related to systemic environmental stress. The position on the Mandala along the three fundamental traits, as well as fluctuations in this ecological state, conveys information about the microbiome's health (and likely ecosystem health considering bacteria-based multitrophic dependencies) as divergence from the expected relative optimality. The Eco-Evo Mandala emphasizes how habitat and the microbiome's interaction network topology are first- and second-order factors for ecosystem health evaluation over taxonomic species richness. Unhealthy microbiome communities and unbalanced microbes are identified not by macroecological indicators but by mapping their impact on the collective proportion and distribution of interactions, which regulates the microbiome's ecosystem function.

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