Abstract

AbstractAimBiogeographical regions are the fundamental geographical units for grouping Earth's biodiversity. Biogeographical regionalization has been demonstrated for many higher taxa, such as terrestrial plants and vertebrates, but not in microbial communities. Therefore, we sought to test empirically whether microbial communities, or taxa, show patterns consistent with biogeographical regionalization.LocationWithin halite (NaCl) crystals from coastal solar salterns of western Europe, the Mediterranean and east Africa.Time periodModern (2006–2013).Major taxa studiedArchaea.MethodsUsing high‐throughput Illumina amplicon sequencing, we generated the most high‐resolution characterization of halite‐associated archaeal communities to date, using samples from 17 locations. We grouped communities into biogeographical clusters based on community turnover to test whether these communities show biogeographical regionalization. To examine whether individual taxa, rather than communities, show biogeographical patterns, we also tested whether the relative abundance of individual genera may be indicative of a community's biogeographical origins using machine learning methods, specifically random forest classification.ResultsWe found that the rate of community turnover was greatest over subregional spatial scales (< 500 km), whereas at regional spatial scales the turnover was independent of geographical distance. Biogeographical clusters of communities were either not statistically robust or lacked spatial coherence, inconsistent with biogeographical regionalization. However, we identified several archaeal genera that were good indicators of biogeographical origin, providing classification error rates of < 10%.Main conclusionsOverall, our results provide little support for the concept of biogeographical regions in these extremophilic microbial communities, despite the fact that some taxa do show biogeographical patterns. We suggest that variable dispersal ability among the halite‐associated Archaea may disrupt biogeographical patterns at the community level, preventing the formation of biogeographical regions. This means that the processes that lead to the formation of biogeographical regions operate differentially on individual microbial taxa rather than on entire communities.

Highlights

  • The classification of Earth’s biota into biogeographical regions separated by dispersal barriers has captivated ecologists for centuries (Sclater, 1858; Wallace, 1876)

  • We found that the rate of community turnover was greatest over subregional spatial scales (< 500 km), whereas at regional spatial scales the turnover was independent of geographical distance

  • We suggest that variable dispersal ability among the halite-associated Archaea may disrupt biogeographical patterns at the community level, preventing the formation of biogeographical regions

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Summary

Introduction

The classification of Earth’s biota into biogeographical regions separated by dispersal barriers has captivated ecologists for centuries (Sclater, 1858; Wallace, 1876). Early attempts to define these regions have been superseded by more quantitative methods, improving the robustness and reproducibility of region delineations (Dapporto, Ciolli, Dennis, Fox, & Shreeve, 2015; Kreft & Jetz, 2010; Vilhena & Antonelli, 2015). Coupled with these new methods, the ever-increasing availability of species distribution data has renewed interest in the concept of biogeographical regionalization. But functionally critical organisms, such as microorganisms, remain poorly studied It is unknown whether microbial communities may be grouped into biogeographical regions, similar to those observed for higher taxa

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