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Direct quantification of ecological drift at the population level in synthetic bacterial communities
by
Barozzi, Alan
, Valenzuela-Cuevas, Adriana
, Daffonchio, Daniele
, Fodelianakis, Stilianos
in
13/31
/ 631/158/855
/ 631/326/2565
/ Bacteria
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Community ecology
/ Dispersal
/ Dispersion
/ Drift
/ Drift estimation
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecology
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Extinct species
/ Growth rate
/ Life Sciences
/ Microbial activity
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Species diversity
/ Stochasticity
2021
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Direct quantification of ecological drift at the population level in synthetic bacterial communities
by
Barozzi, Alan
, Valenzuela-Cuevas, Adriana
, Daffonchio, Daniele
, Fodelianakis, Stilianos
in
13/31
/ 631/158/855
/ 631/326/2565
/ Bacteria
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Community ecology
/ Dispersal
/ Dispersion
/ Drift
/ Drift estimation
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecology
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Extinct species
/ Growth rate
/ Life Sciences
/ Microbial activity
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Species diversity
/ Stochasticity
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
Direct quantification of ecological drift at the population level in synthetic bacterial communities
by
Barozzi, Alan
, Valenzuela-Cuevas, Adriana
, Daffonchio, Daniele
, Fodelianakis, Stilianos
in
13/31
/ 631/158/855
/ 631/326/2565
/ Bacteria
/ Bacteria - genetics
/ Biomedical and Life Sciences
/ Community ecology
/ Dispersal
/ Dispersion
/ Drift
/ Drift estimation
/ Ecological effects
/ Ecology
/ Evolutionary Biology
/ Extinct species
/ Growth rate
/ Life Sciences
/ Microbial activity
/ Microbial Ecology
/ Microbial Genetics and Genomics
/ Microbiology
/ Microbiota
/ Microorganisms
/ Species diversity
/ Stochasticity
2021
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Direct quantification of ecological drift at the population level in synthetic bacterial communities
Journal Article
Direct quantification of ecological drift at the population level in synthetic bacterial communities
2021
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Overview
In community ecology, drift refers to random births and deaths in a population. In microbial ecology, drift is estimated indirectly via community snapshots but in this way, it is almost impossible to distinguish the effect of drift from the effect of other ecological processes. Controlled experiments where drift is quantified in isolation from other processes are still missing. Here we isolate and quantify drift in a series of controlled experiments on simplified and tractable bacterial communities. We detect drift arising randomly in the populations within the communities and resulting in a 1.4–2% increase in their growth rate variability on average. We further use our experimental findings to simulate complex microbial communities under various conditions of selection and dispersal. We find that the importance of drift increases under high selection and low dispersal, where it can lead to ~5% of species loss and to ~15% increase in β-diversity. The species extinct by drift are mainly rare, but they become increasingly less rare when selection increases, and dispersal decreases. Our results provide quantitative insights regarding the properties of drift in bacterial communities and suggest that it accounts for a consistent fraction of the observed stochasticity in natural surveys.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Oxford University Press
Subject
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