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Rare Microbial Taxa Emerge When Communities Collide: Freshwater and Marine Microbiome Responses to Experimental Seawater Intrusion

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rocca, J; Simonin, M; Wright, J; Washburne, A; Bernhardt, E
2019

Whole microbial communities regularly merge with one another, often in tandem with their environments, in a process called community coalescence. Such events allow us to address a central question in ecology – what processes shape community assembly. We used a reciprocal transplant and mixing experiment to directly and independently unravel the effects of environmental filtering and biotic interactions on microbiome success when freshwater and marine communities coalesce. The brackish treatment and community mixing resulted in strong convergence of microbiome structure and function toward the marine. Brackish exposure imposed a 96% taxa loss from freshwater and 66% loss from marine microbiomes, which was somewhat counterbalanced by the emergence of tolerant rare taxa. Community mixing further resulted in 29% and 49% loss from biotic interactions between freshwater and marine microbiomes, offset somewhat by mutualistically-assisted rare microbial taxa. Our study emphasizes the importance of the rare biosphere as a critical component of community resilience.

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Publication Date

2019
 

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DOI

Publication Date

2019