Chronic Environmental Perturbation Influences Microbial Community Assembly Patterns

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Abstract

Acute environmental perturbations are reported to induce deterministic microbial community assembly, while it is hypothesized that chronic perturbations promote development of alternative stable states. Such acute or chronic perturbations strongly impact on the pre-adaptation capacity to the perturbation. To determine the importance of the level of microbial pre-adaptation and the community assembly processes following acute or chronic perturbations in the context of hydrocarbon contamination, a model system of pristine and polluted (hydrocarbon-contaminated) sediments was incubated in the absence or presence (discrete or repeated) of hydrocarbon amendment. The community structure of the pristine sediments changed significantly following acute perturbation, with selection of different phylotypes not initially detectable. Conversely, historically polluted sediments maintained the initial community structure, and the historical legacy effect of chronic pollution likely facilitated community stability. An alternative stable state was also reached in the pristine sediments following chronic perturbation, further demonstrating the existence of a legacy effect. Finally, ecosystem functional resilience was demonstrated through occurrence of hydrocarbon degradation by different communities in the tested sites, but the legacy effect of perturbation also strongly influenced the biotic response. This study therefore demonstrates the importance of perturbation chronicity on microbial community assembly processes and reveals ecosystem functional resilience following environmental perturbation.

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APA

Potts, L. D., Douglas, A., Perez Calderon, L. J., Anderson, J. A., Witte, U., Prosser, J. I., & Gubry-Rangin, C. (2022). Chronic Environmental Perturbation Influences Microbial Community Assembly Patterns. Environmental Science and Technology, 56(4), 2300–2311. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.est.1c05106

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