Species divergence and the measurement of microbial diversity

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Abstract

Diversity measurement is important for understanding community structure and dynamics, but has been particularly challenging for microorganisms. Microbial community characterization using small subunit rRNA (SSU rRNA) gene sequences has revealed an extensive, previously unsuspected diversity that we are only now beginning to understand, especially now that advanced sequencing technologies are producing datasets containing hundreds of thousands of sequences from hundreds of samples. Efforts to quantify microbial diversity often use taxon-based methods that ignore the fact that not all species are equally related, which can therefore obscure important patterns in the data. For example, α-diversity (diversity within communities) is often estimated as the number of species in a community (species richness), and β-diversity (partitioning of diversity among communities) is often based on the number of shared species. Methods for measuring α- and β-diversity that account for different levels of divergence between individuals have recently been more widely applied. These methods are more powerful than taxon-based methods because microorganisms in a community differ dramatically in sequence similarity, which also often correlates with phenotypic similarity in key features such as metabolic capabilities. Consequently, divergence-based methods are providing new insights into microbial community structure and function. © 2008 Federation of European Microbiological Societies. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Lozupone, C. A., & Knight, R. (2008, July). Species divergence and the measurement of microbial diversity. FEMS Microbiology Reviews. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6976.2008.00111.x

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