Effects of dispersal and selection on stochastic assembly in microbial communities
Authored by Sarah Evans, Jennifer B H Martiny, Steven D Allison
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2016.96
Sponsors:
United States Department of Energy (DOE)
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Stochastic processes can play an important role in microbial community
assembly. Dispersal limitation is one process that can increase
stochasticity and obscure relationships between environmental variables
and microbial community composition, but the relationship between
dispersal, selection and stochasticity has not been described in a
comprehensive way. We examine how dispersal and its interactions with
drift and selection alter the consistency with which microbial
communities assemble using a realistic, individual-based model of
microbial decomposers. Communities were assembled under different
environmental conditions and dispersal rates in repeated simulations, and we examined the compositional difference among replicate communities
colonizing the same type of leaf litter ('within-group distance'), as
well as between-group deterministic selection. Dispersal rates below
25\% turnover per year resulted in high within-group distance among
communities and no significant environmental effects. As dispersal
limitation was alleviated, both within- and between-group distance
decreased, but despite this homogenization, deterministic environmental
effects remained significant. In addition to direct effects of dispersal
rate, stochasticity of community composition was influenced by an
interaction between dispersal and selection strength. Specifically, communities experiencing stronger selection (less favorable litter
chemistries) were more stochastic, possibly because lower biomass and
richness intensified drift or priority effects. Overall, we show that
dispersal rate can significantly alter patterns of community
composition. Partitioning the effects of dispersal, selection and drift
based on static patterns of microbial composition will be difficult, if
not impossible. Experiments will be required to tease apart these
complex interactions between assembly processes shaping microbial
communities.
Tags
ecology
patterns
biogeography
microorganisms
Disturbance
Tests
Local species-diversity
Litter decomposition
Metacommunities
Immigration