Abstract

The analytical power of environmental DNA sequences for modeling microbial ecosystems depends on accurate assessments of population structure, including diversity (richness) and relative abundance (evenness). We investigated both aspects of population structure for microbial communities at two neighboring hydrothermal vents by examining the sequences of more than 900,000 microbial small-subunit ribosomal RNA amplicons. The two vent communities have different population structures that reflect local geochemical regimes. Descriptions of archaeal diversity were nearly exhaustive, but despite collecting an unparalleled number of sequences, statistical analyses indicated additional bacterial diversity at every taxonomic level. We predict that hundreds of thousands of sequences will be necessary to capture the vast diversity of microbial communities, and that different patterns of evenness for both high- and low-abundance taxa may be important in defining microbial ecosystem dynamics.

Keywords

Species evennessSpecies richnessAbundance (ecology)EcologyRelative species abundanceBiologyPopulationEcosystemMicrobial population biologyBiodiversityRank abundance curveCommunity structurePaleontology

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Publication Info

Year
2007
Type
article
Volume
318
Issue
5847
Pages
97-100
Citations
891
Access
Closed

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Julie A. Huber, David B. Mark Welch, Hilary G. Morrison et al. (2007). Microbial Population Structures in the Deep Marine Biosphere. Science , 318 (5847) , 97-100. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1146689

Identifiers

DOI
10.1126/science.1146689