Abstract

Recent advances in knowledge of patterns of biogeography in terrestrial eukaryotic organisms have led to a fundamental paradigm shift in understanding of the controls and history of life on land in Antarctica, and its interactions over the long term with the glaciological and geological processes that have shaped the continent. However, while it has long been recognized that the terrestrial ecosystems of Antarctica are dominated by microbes and their processes, knowledge of microbial diversity and distributions has lagged far behind that of the macroscopic eukaryote organisms. Increasing human contact with and activity in the continent is leading to risks of biological contamination and change in a region whose isolation has protected it for millions of years at least; these risks may be particularly acute for microbial communities which have, as yet, received scant recognition and attention. Even a matter apparently as straightforward as Protected Area designation in Antarctica requires robust biodiversity data which, in most parts of the continent, remain almost completely unavailable. A range of important contributing factors mean that it is now timely to reconsider the state of knowledge of Antarctic terrestrial prokaryotes. Rapid advances in molecular biological approaches are increasingly demonstrating that bacterial diversity in Antarctica may be far greater than previously thought, and that there is overlap in the environmental controls affecting both Antarctic prokaryotic and eukaryotic communities. Bacterial dispersal mechanisms and colonization patterns remain largely unaddressed, although evidence for regional evolutionary differentiation is rapidly accruing and, with this, there is increasing appreciation of patterns in regional bacterial biogeography in this large part of the globe. In this review, we set out to describe the state of knowledge of Antarctic prokaryote diversity patterns, drawing analogy with those of eukaryote groups where appropriate. Based on our synthesis, it is clear that spatial patterns of Antarctic prokaryotes can be unique at local scales, while the limited evidence available to date supports the group exhibiting overall regional biogeographical patterns similar to the eukaryotes. We further consider the applicability of the concept of “functional redundancy” for the Antarctic microbial community and highlight the requirements for proper consideration of their important and distinctive roles in Antarctic terrestrial ecosystems.

Highlights

  • Due to their importance to the fundamental assembly of ecosystems, considerable effort has been devoted to study of the interactions of spatial scale, external physicochemical parameters and species distributions (e.g., King et al, 2010; Nemergut et al, 2011; Westgate et al, 2014)

  • Adopting a similar approach to that of Martiny et al (2006), we focus our discussion primarily on Antarctic prokaryotic spatial patterning, making reference to patterns inferred in Antarctic eukaryotic studies where appropriate

  • Our synthesis leads to the proposition of a new conceptual model to explain the mechanisms underlying species-function relationships in Antarctica, and the experimental framework required to provide such mechanistic insight based on empirical data

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Summary

Emerging spatial patterns in Antarctic prokaryotes

Specialty section: This article was submitted to Terrestrial Microbiology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology. Recent advances in knowledge of patterns of biogeography in terrestrial eukaryotic organisms have led to a fundamental paradigm shift in understanding of the controls and history of life on land in Antarctica, and its interactions over the long term with the glaciological and geological processes that have shaped the continent. While it has long been recognized that the terrestrial ecosystems of Antarctica are dominated by microbes and their processes, knowledge of microbial diversity and distributions has lagged far behind that of the macroscopic eukaryote organisms. Rapid advances in molecular biological approaches are increasingly demonstrating that bacterial diversity in Antarctica may be far greater than previously thought, and that there is overlap in the environmental controls affecting both Antarctic prokaryotic and eukaryotic communities.

Introduction
Macroecological Patterns in Antarctica
Spatial Patterns of Prokaryotic Diversity
Soil Microbial Diversity
Microbiological approach Region
Issues and Limitations of Antarctic Prokaryotic Biogeography
Lack of Spatial Coverage
Ecological Functions and Biogeography of Antarctic Bacterial Communities
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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