Literature DB >> 18695215

Colloquium paper: microbes on mountainsides: contrasting elevational patterns of bacterial and plant diversity.

Jessica A Bryant1, Christine Lamanna, Hélène Morlon, Andrew J Kerkhoff, Brian J Enquist, Jessica L Green.   

Abstract

The study of elevational diversity gradients dates back to the foundation of biogeography. Although elevational patterns of plant and animal diversity have been studied for centuries, such patterns have not been reported for microorganisms and remain poorly understood. Here, in an effort to assess the generality of elevational diversity patterns, we examined soil bacterial and plant diversity along an elevation gradient. To gain insight into the forces that structure these patterns, we adopted a multifaceted approach to incorporate information about the structure, diversity, and spatial turnover of montane communities in a phylogenetic context. We found that observed patterns of plant and bacterial diversity were fundamentally different. While bacterial taxon richness and phylogenetic diversity decreased monotonically from the lowest to highest elevations, plants followed a unimodal pattern, with a peak in richness and phylogenetic diversity at mid-elevations. At all elevations bacterial communities had a tendency to be phylogenetically clustered, containing closely related taxa. In contrast, plant communities did not exhibit a uniform phylogenetic structure across the gradient: they became more overdispersed with increasing elevation, containing distantly related taxa. Finally, a metric of phylogenetic beta-diversity showed that bacterial lineages were not randomly distributed, but rather exhibited significant spatial structure across the gradient, whereas plant lineages did not exhibit a significant phylogenetic signal. Quantifying the influence of sample scale in intertaxonomic comparisons remains a challenge. Nevertheless, our findings suggest that the forces structuring microorganism and macroorganism communities along elevational gradients differ.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 18695215      PMCID: PMC2556412          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0801920105

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  49 in total

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  181 in total

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8.  Global phylogeography of chitinase genes in aquatic metagenomes.

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9.  Deterministic tropical tree community turnover: evidence from patterns of functional beta diversity along an elevational gradient.

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10.  Viral and Bacterial Fecal Indicators in Untreated Wastewater across the Contiguous United States Exhibit Geospatial Trends.

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Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2020-04-01       Impact factor: 4.792

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