Abstract

Soil microbial communities perform vital ecosystem functions, such as the decomposition of organic matter to provide plant nutrition. However, despite the functional importance of soil microorganisms, attribution of ecosystem function to particular constituents of the microbial community has been impeded by a lack of information linking microbial function to community composition and structure. Here, we propose a function-first framework to predict how microbial communities influence ecosystem functions. We first view the microbial community associated with a specific function as a whole and describe the dependence of microbial functions on environmental factors (e.g., the intrinsic temperature dependence of bacterial growth rates). This step defines the aggregate functional response curve of the community. Second, the contribution of the whole community to ecosystem function can be predicted, by combining the functional response curve with current environmental conditions. Functional response curves can then be linked with taxonomic data in order to identify sets of "biomarker" taxa that signal how microbial communities regulate ecosystem functions. Ultimately, such indicator taxa may be used as a diagnostic tool, enabling predictions of ecosystem function from community composition. In this paper, we provide three examples to illustrate the proposed framework, whereby the dependence of bacterial growth on environmental factors, including temperature, pH, and salinity, is defined as the functional response curve used to interlink soil bacterial community structure and function. Applying this framework will make it possible to predict ecosystem functions directly from microbial community composition.

Highlights

  • Understanding of how organisms regulate ecosystem functions is relatively mature in the study of macrobiota (Brown et al 2004)

  • Despite the functional importance of soil microorganisms, attribution of ecosystem function to particular constituents of the microbial community has been impeded by a lack of information linking microbial function to community composition and structure

  • We first view the microbial community associated with a specific function as a whole and describe the dependence of microbial functions on environmental factors

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Summary

EMPHASIZING NEW IDEAS TO STIMULATE RESEARCH IN ECOLOGY

1,8 BEAT FREY, RASMUS KJØLLER, MARTIN LUKAC, MARI MOORA, JAMES T.

INTRODUCTION
Environmental conditions
IDENTIFICATION OF INDICATOR TAXA
Soil pH
Findings
LITERATURE CITED
Full Text
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