Abstract

While the dynamics of microbial community assembly driven by environmental perturbations have been extensively studied, our understanding is far from complete, particularly for light-induced perturbations. Extremely halophilic communities thriving in coastal solar salterns are mainly influenced by two environmental factors-salt concentrations and high sunlight irradiation. By experimentally manipulating light intensity through the application of shading, we showed that light acts as a deterministic factor that ultimately drives the establishment of recurrent microbial communities under near-saturation salt concentrations. In particular, the stable and highly change-resistant communities that established under high-light intensities were dominated (>90% of metagenomic reads) by Haloquadratum spp. and Salinibacter spp. On the other hand, under 37-fold lower light intensity, different, less stable and change-resistant communities were established, mainly dominated by yet unclassified haloarchaea and relatively diverse photosynthetic microorganisms. These communities harboured, in general, much lower carotenoid pigment content than their high-irradiation counterparts. Both assemblage types appeared to be highly resilient, re-establishing when favourable conditions returned after perturbation (i.e. high-irradiation for the former communities and low-irradiation for the latter ones). Overall, our results revealed that stochastic processes were of limited significance to explain these patterns.

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