Literature DB >> 21985648

Metagenetic community analysis of microbial eukaryotes illuminates biogeographic patterns in deep-sea and shallow water sediments.

Holly M Bik1, Way Sung, Paul De Ley, James G Baldwin, Jyotsna Sharma, Axayácatl Rocha-Olivares, W Kelley Thomas.   

Abstract

Microbial eukaryotes (nematodes, protists, fungi, etc., loosely referred to as meiofauna) are ubiquitous in marine sediments and probably play pivotal roles in maintaining ecosystem function. Although the deep-sea benthos represents one of the world's largest habitats, we lack a firm understanding of the biodiversity and community interactions amongst meiobenthic organisms in this ecosystem. Within this vast environment, key questions concerning the historical genetic structure of species remain a mystery, yet have profound implications for our understanding of global biodiversity and how we perceive and mitigate the impact of environmental change and anthropogenic disturbance. Using a metagenetic approach, we present an assessment of microbial eukaryote communities across depth (shallow water to abyssal) and ocean basins (deep-sea Pacific and Atlantic). Within the 12 sites examined, our results suggest that some taxa can maintain eurybathic ranges and cosmopolitan deep-sea distributions, but the majority of species appear to be regionally restricted. For Operationally Clustered Taxonomic Units (OCTUs) reporting wide distributions, there appears to be a taxonomic bias towards a small subset of taxa in most phyla; such bias may be driven by specific life history traits amongst these organisms. In addition, low genetic divergence between geographically disparate deep-sea sites suggests either a shorter coalescence time between deep-sea regions or slower rates of evolution across this vast oceanic ecosystem. While high-throughput studies allow for broad assessment of genetic patterns across microbial eukaryote communities, intragenomic variation in rRNA gene copies and the patchy coverage of reference databases currently present substantial challenges for robust taxonomic interpretations of eukaryotic data sets.
© 2011 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21985648      PMCID: PMC3261328          DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-294X.2011.05297.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  27 in total

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4.  Dispersal limitations matter for microbial morphospecies.

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7.  Evaluating high-throughput sequencing as a method for metagenomic analysis of nematode diversity.

Authors:  Dorota L Porazinska; Robin M Giblin-Davis; Lina Faller; William Farmerie; Natsumi Kanzaki; Krystalynne Morris; Thomas O Powers; Abraham E Tucker; Way Sung; W Kelley Thomas
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  45 in total

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6.  Environmental Sequencing Provides Reasonable Estimates of the Relative Abundance of Specific Picoeukaryotes.

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Review 7.  Sequencing our way towards understanding global eukaryotic biodiversity.

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10.  The widely used small subunit 18S rDNA molecule greatly underestimates true diversity in biodiversity surveys of the meiofauna.

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