| Literature DB >> 24904563 |
Sascha Krause1, Xavier Le Roux2, Pascal A Niklaus3, Peter M Van Bodegom4, Jay T Lennon5, Stefan Bertilsson6, Hans-Peter Grossart7, Laurent Philippot8, Paul L E Bodelier9.
Abstract
In ecology, biodiversity-ecosystem functioning (BEF) research has seen a shift in perspective from taxonomy to function in the last two decades, with successful application of trait-based approaches. This shift offers opportunities for a deeper mechanistic understanding of the role of biodiversity in maintaining multiple ecosystem processes and services. In this paper, we highlight studies that have focused on BEF of microbial communities with an emphasis on integrating trait-based approaches to microbial ecology. In doing so, we explore some of the inherent challenges and opportunities of understanding BEF using microbial systems. For example, microbial biologists characterize communities using gene phylogenies that are often unable to resolve functional traits. Additionally, experimental designs of existing microbial BEF studies are often inadequate to unravel BEF relationships. We argue that combining eco-physiological studies with contemporary molecular tools in a trait-based framework can reinforce our ability to link microbial diversity to ecosystem processes. We conclude that such trait-based approaches are a promising framework to increase the understanding of microbial BEF relationships and thus generating systematic principles in microbial ecology and more generally ecology.Entities:
Keywords: ecological theory; ecosystem function; functional traits; microbial diversity; study designs
Year: 2014 PMID: 24904563 PMCID: PMC4033906 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2014.00251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Common terms used in BEF and trait-based BEF approaches.
| Functional traits | Well-defined, measurable properties at the individual level (e.g., organisms, populations) generally used to link performance and contribution to one or several function(s) in any given ecosystem. Thereby, any key property related to physiology, morphology, or genomic information that affects the fitness or function of an organism can be regarded as a functional trait (Violle et al., |
| Community trait mean | Mean value calculated for each trait as the mean trait value in a community which can be weighted by the relative abundance of individual taxa in a community (Díaz et al., |
| Gradient analysis | Assessment of functioning, abundances and/or diversity of organisms along an environmental gradient in the field, or in the laboratory along pre-defined treatment gradients (McGill et al., |
| Ecosystem functions/functioning | Ecosystem functions in a broad sense can be categorized into functions, e.g., fluxes of energy, nutrients and organic matter; and functioning, e.g., primary production, disturbance resistance, and services like crop yield, wood production, and soil erosion control (Balvanera et al., |
| Application | N-dimensional hypervolume with n as the number of dimensions defining the niche, e.g., salinity, temperature, food availability (Begon et al., |
Figure 1Temporal variations in (top) the number of publications on Biodiversity-Ecosystem Functioning, BEF, relationships in a broad sense for microorganisms as compared to plants, and (bottom) the percentage of publications on microbial BEF or plant BEF where biodiversity was directly manipulated. The search terms used are provided in Supplementary Material 1. At each step of the search profile development, we checked on subsamples that the search hits corresponded to the targeted type of studies. We also checked that a selection of key experiments/papers we knew about were found.
Comparison between trait-based studies that relate microbial biodiversity and ecosystem functioning across environmental gradients/treatments, and those directly manipulating components of diversity.
| Level of trait assessment | Functional group/Community | Strain |
| Trait resolution | Community-mean traits/within community distribution of traits | Taxon-specific traits/multiple traits in individual taxa/tradeoffs among traits |
| Key eco-physiological techniques | Stable isotope probing; Biolog/Ecoplates; etc. | Metabolic and physiological studies of individual cells and strains |
| Key -omics techniques | DNA and RNA single gene sequence diversity; environmental (meta-)genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics | Genomics, transcriptomics, proteomics, and metabolomics on cells and strains |
| Main scale | The real world (field studies; complex natural communities) | Laboratory (model systems) |
| Level of understanding | Correlational link between biodiversity and functioning along environmental gradients | Causal/direct/mechanistic link between biodiversity and functioning; complementarity/selection/facilitation effects |
Figure 2Reflection of microbial traits on the Competitor-Ruderal-Stress tolerator life strategy framework as was proposed for plants (Grime, . The scheme has been adapted for Ho et al. (2013) who used this framework for assigning life-strategies to methane-oxidizing bacteria. The scheme groups subsets of microbial traits which collectively would be of most importance for the respective strategy. The traits collectively accommodate exploring and exploiting habitats, competing with other organisms, tolerating or avoiding surviving stress, and deprivation. This classification is purely qualitative but, for some traits, life-history strategies have been proposed in earlier studies (Fierer et al., 2007; Portillo et al., 2013).