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Journal article

Metapopulation theory identifies biogeographical patterns among core and satellite marine bacteria scaling from tens to thousands of kilometers: Applied metapopulation theory for marine microbes

From

Linnaeus University1

National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark2

Centre for Ocean Life, National Institute of Aquatic Resources, Technical University of Denmark3

Lund University4

Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences5

KTH Royal Institute of Technology6

Umeå University7

Metapopulation theory developed in terrestrial ecology provides applicable frameworks for interpreting the role of local and regional processes in shaping species distribution patterns. Yet, empirical testing of metapopulation models on microbial communities is essentially lacking. We determined regional bacterioplankton dynamics from monthly transect sampling in the Baltic Sea Proper using 16S rRNA gene sequencing.

A strong positive trend was found between local relative abundance and occupancy of populations. Notably, the occupancy-frequency distributions were significantly bimodal with a satellite mode of rare endemic populations and a core mode of abundant cosmopolitan populations (e.g. Synechococcus, SAR11 and SAR86 clade members).

Temporal changes in population distributions supported several theoretical frameworks. Still, bimodality was found among bacterioplankton communities across the entire Baltic Sea, and was also frequent in globally distributed datasets. Datasets spanning waters with widely different physicochemical characteristics or environmental gradients typically lacked significant bimodal patterns.

When such datasets were divided into subsets with coherent environmental conditions, bimodal patterns emerged, highlighting the importance of positive feedbacks between local abundance and occupancy within specific biomes. Thus, metapopulation theory applied to microbial biogeography can provide novel insights into the mechanisms governing shifts in biodiversity resulting from natural or anthropogenically induced changes in the environment.

Language: English
Publisher: Wiley
Year: 2017
Pages: 1222-1236
ISSN: 14622920 and 14622912
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.13650
ORCIDs: 0000-0002-8779-6464 and 0000-0002-6405-1347

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