Abstract
Soil bacterial communities are dominated by a few abundant species, while their richness is associated with rare species with largely unknown ecological roles and biogeography. Analyses of previously published soil bacterial community data using a novel classification of common and rare bacteria indicate that only 0.4% of bacterial species can be considered common and are prevalent across biomes. The remaining bacterial species designated as rare are endemic with low relative abundances. Observations coupled with mechanistic models highlight the central role of soil wetness in shaping bacterial rarity. An individual-based model reveals systematic shifts in community composition induced by low carbon inputs in drier soils that deprive common species of exhibiting physiological advantages relative to other species. We find that only a “chosen few” common species shape bacterial communities across biomes; however, their contributions are curtailed in resource-limited environments where a larger number of rare species constitutes the soil microbiome.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Bickel, S., & Or, D. (2021). The chosen few—variations in common and rare soil bacteria across biomes. ISME Journal, 15(11), 3315–3325. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-021-00981-3
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.