Community Assembly Patterns and Processes of Microbial
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Patterns and Processes of Microbial Community Assembly Diana R. Nemergut, Steven K. Schmidt, Tadashi Fukami, Downloaded from Sean P. O'Neill, Teresa M. Bilinski, Lee F. Stanish, Joseph E. Knelman, John L. Darcy, Ryan C. Lynch, Phillip Wickey and Scott Ferrenberg Microbiol. Mol. Biol. Rev. 2013, 77(3):342. DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.00051-12. http://mmbr.asm.org/ Updated information and services can be found at: http://mmbr.asm.org/content/77/3/342 These include: REFERENCES This article cites 151 articles, 40 of which can be accessed free on September 10, 2013 by The University of British Columbia Library at: http://mmbr.asm.org/content/77/3/342#ref-list-1 CONTENT ALERTS Receive: RSS Feeds, eTOCs, free email alerts (when new articles cite this article), more» Information about commercial reprint orders: http://journals.asm.org/site/misc/reprints.xhtml To subscribe to to another ASM Journal go to: http://journals.asm.org/site/subscriptions/ Patterns and Processes of Microbial Community Assembly Diana R. Nemergut,a,b Steven K. Schmidt,c Tadashi Fukami,d Sean P. O’Neill,a,c Teresa M. Bilinski,a,c Lee F. Stanish,a,b Joseph E. Knelman,a,c John L. Darcy,c Ryan C. Lynch,c Phillip Wickey,a,b Scott Ferrenbergc Downloaded from Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research (INSTAAR),a Environmental Studies Program,b and Ecology and Evolutionary Biology,c University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, USA; Department of Biology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, USAd SUMMARY ..................................................................................................................................................342 INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................................342 HOW ARE MICROBES UNIQUE? ............................................................................................................................343 DEFINITIONS ...............................................................................................................................................343 http://mmbr.asm.org/ Communities .............................................................................................................................................343 Biodiversity ...............................................................................................................................................344 BIOGEOGRAPHICAL PATTERNS ............................................................................................................................345 Abundance...............................................................................................................................................345 Taxon Turnover...........................................................................................................................................345 Phylogenetic Structure ...................................................................................................................................346 VELLEND’S CONCEPTUAL SYNTHESIS OF COMMUNITY ECOLOGY .......................................................................................346 SELECTION..................................................................................................................................................347 DISPERSAL ..................................................................................................................................................347 DIVERSIFICATION...........................................................................................................................................348 DRIFT .......................................................................................................................................................348 on September 10, 2013 by The University of British Columbia Library COMBINING FORCES: COMMUNITY ASSEMBLY ...........................................................................................................348 TEMPORAL AND SPATIAL SCALES .........................................................................................................................349 IMPLICATIONS FOR FUNCTION ............................................................................................................................350 IMPLICATIONS FOR BIODIVERSITY .........................................................................................................................350 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS......................................................................................................................................351 REFERENCES ................................................................................................................................................351 AUTHOR BIOS ..............................................................................................................................................355 SUMMARY putational advances (6, 7), as well as new standards for contextu- Recent research has expanded our understanding of microbial com- alizing environmental microbial community composition data munity assembly. However, the field of community ecology is inac- sets (8), will allow us to make the most of these data, facilitating cessible to many microbial ecologists because of inconsistent and of- cross-investigator and cross-system meta-analyses. Indeed, after ten confusing terminology as well as unnecessarily polarizing debates. years of citing the many limitations of studying such complex Thus, we review recent literature on microbial community assembly, systems, microbiologists now enjoy many advantages that our col- using the framework of Vellend (Q. Rev. Biol. 85:183–206, 2010) in leagues who study macrobial communities actually lack. Admit- an effort to synthesize and unify these contributions. We begin by tedly, we are still a long way from a “complete” understanding of discussing patterns in microbial biogeography and then describe four any but the most simple of microbial communities, which will basic processes (diversification, dispersal, selection, and drift) that require continual improvements in both technology and compu- contribute to community assembly. We also discuss different combi- tation. Thus, despite these recent advances, we are faced with nations of these processes and where and when they may be most questions about how to best sample microbial communities to important for shaping microbial communities. The spatial and tem- maximize what we can learn about how they are structured, how poral scales of microbial community assembly are also discussed in they function, and how they change through time (9). relation to assembly processes. Throughout this review paper, we A unified conceptual framework of microbial community as- highlight differences between microbes and macroorganisms and sembly—one that incorporates our understanding of community generate hypotheses describing how these differences may be impor- assembly from a macrobial ecology perspective while recognizing tant for community assembly. We end by discussing the implications the attributes that make microorganisms unique—is needed to of microbial assembly processes for ecosystem function and biodiver- help direct the field of microbial ecology through this new era. sity. This is not an easy task, and we argue that it is made more difficult by unnecessarily polarizing debates (e.g., the false dichotomy of INTRODUCTION the niche-versus-neutral debate [10] as well as the debates over olecular phylogenetic approaches continue to revolutionize Mthe field of microbiology: we now possess the tools to un- derstand high-resolution details about the degree of variation in Address correspondence to Diana R. Nemergut, [email protected]. microbial community structure in both space and time (1–5). Copyright © 2013, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved. Sequencing costs have plummeted, while the amount of publicly doi:10.1128/MMBR.00051-12 available data has increased exponentially in recent years. Com- 342 mmbr.asm.org Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews p. 342–356 September 2013 Volume 77 Number 3 Microbial Community Assembly null models [11]) as well as the use of inconsistent and sometimes croorganisms is likely to be much larger than that of macroorgan- redundant terminology (e.g., niche based, deterministic, environ- isms. mental filters, and stabilizing mechanisms, which all refer to sim- Likewise, many microorganisms can experience dormancy, in ilar phenomena). However, we believe that Vellend’s (5) concep- which they enter a reversible state of reduced activity in response tual synthesis of community ecology, which distills the myriad of to environmental stressors (21, 22). Indeed, several examples of processes affecting community assembly into four basic categories cells being revived after decades to millennia exist in the literature Downloaded from (diversification, dispersal, selection, and drift) and can be applied (22). Although this is true of some macrobes as well, the phenom- on different temporal and spatial scales, is a step in the right di- enon is more phylogenetically widespread (i.e., not limited to a rection (see also reference 12). The purpose of this review is to specific clade or clades) for microorganisms (22). It has been es- integrate microorganisms into this simple framework with the timated that less than 10% of a typical microbial community may hope of providing microbiologists with a coherent picture