TY - JOUR
T1 - Absence of stress-promoted facilitation coupled with a competition decrease in the microbiome of ephemeral saline lakes
AU - Menéndez-Serra, Mateu
AU - Ontiveros, Vicente J.
AU - Barberán, Albert
AU - Casamayor, Emilio O.
N1 - Funding Information: We are thankful to Xavier Triadó‐Margarit for field and lab assistance. Funding was provided by grant INTERACTOMA RTI2018‐101205‐B‐I00 from the Spanish Agency of Research (AEI‐MICINN) and European funding (ERDF) to Emilio O. Casamayor. Mateu Menéndez‐Serra was supported by the Spanish FPI PhD scholarships program (BRIDGES‐MINECO CGL2015‐69043‐P). Funding Information: Spanish FPI PhD scholarships program, Grant/Award Number: BRIDGES‐MINECO‐CGL2015‐69043‐P; Spanish Agency of Research (AEI‐MICINN) and European funding (ERDF), Grant/Award Number: INTERACTOMA‐RTI2018‐101205‐B‐I00 Funding information Funding Information: We are thankful to Xavier Triadó-Margarit for field and lab assistance. Funding was provided by grant INTERACTOMA RTI2018-101205-B-I00 from the Spanish Agency of Research (AEI-MICINN) and European funding (ERDF) to Emilio O. Casamayor. Mateu Menéndez-Serra was supported by the Spanish FPI PhD scholarships program (BRIDGES-MINECO CGL2015-69043-P). Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors. Ecology published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of The Ecological Society of America.
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - Salinity fluctuations constitute a well-known high stress factor strongly shaping global biological distributions and abundances. However, there is a knowledge gap regarding how increasing saline stress affects microbial biological interactions. We applied the combination of a probabilistic method for estimating significant co-occurrences/exclusions and a conceptual framework for filtering out associations potentially linked to environmental and/or spatial factors, in a series of connected ephemeral (hyper) saline lakes. We carried out a network analysis over the full aquatic microbiome—bacteria, eukarya, and archaea—under severe salinity fluctuations. Most of the observed co-occurrences/exclusions were potentially explained by environmental niche and/or dispersal limitation. Co-occurrences assigned to potential biological interactions remained stable, suggesting that the salt gradient was not promoting interspecific facilitation processes. Conversely, co-exclusions assigned to potential biological interactions decreased along the gradient both in number and network complexity, pointing to a decrease of interspecies competition as salinity increased. Overall, higher saline stress reduced microbial co-exclusions while co-occurrences remained stable suggesting decreasing competition coupled with lack of stress-gradient promoted facilitation in the microbiome of ephemeral saline lakes.
AB - Salinity fluctuations constitute a well-known high stress factor strongly shaping global biological distributions and abundances. However, there is a knowledge gap regarding how increasing saline stress affects microbial biological interactions. We applied the combination of a probabilistic method for estimating significant co-occurrences/exclusions and a conceptual framework for filtering out associations potentially linked to environmental and/or spatial factors, in a series of connected ephemeral (hyper) saline lakes. We carried out a network analysis over the full aquatic microbiome—bacteria, eukarya, and archaea—under severe salinity fluctuations. Most of the observed co-occurrences/exclusions were potentially explained by environmental niche and/or dispersal limitation. Co-occurrences assigned to potential biological interactions remained stable, suggesting that the salt gradient was not promoting interspecific facilitation processes. Conversely, co-exclusions assigned to potential biological interactions decreased along the gradient both in number and network complexity, pointing to a decrease of interspecies competition as salinity increased. Overall, higher saline stress reduced microbial co-exclusions while co-occurrences remained stable suggesting decreasing competition coupled with lack of stress-gradient promoted facilitation in the microbiome of ephemeral saline lakes.
KW - aquatic microbiome
KW - microbial interactions
KW - network analysis
KW - salt gradient
KW - stress gradient hypothesis
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U2 - https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3834
DO - https://doi.org/10.1002/ecy.3834
M3 - Article
C2 - 35872610
SN - 0012-9658
VL - 103
JO - Ecology
JF - Ecology
IS - 12
M1 - e3834
ER -