Effects of diversity and dispersal on the response of bacterial community to starvation perturbation

Bacterial diversity and ecosystem functioning (BEF) relationships have received considerable attention during the last three decades and tend to be positive in most cases. However, most studies were done in closed systems and largely ignored the importance of placing local communities into the metac...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Zha, Yinghua
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Limnologi 2011
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Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-166049
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Summary:Bacterial diversity and ecosystem functioning (BEF) relationships have received considerable attention during the last three decades and tend to be positive in most cases. However, most studies were done in closed systems and largely ignored the importance of placing local communities into the metacommunity context, in which dispersal can be a crucial factor modifying community diversity and composition and ecosystem functioning. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of both diversity and dispersal on the responses of bacterial community to a starvation perturbation. To achieve this, we implemented a batch culture experiment using the dilution-to-extinction approach to create a diversity gradient of local bacterial community richness. Different dispersal rates were manipulated by transferring cells in different quantities from a regional source to the cultures, and they were then exposed to a perturbation by transferring them into water from another lake which differed in organic carbon content and quality. We evaluated the BEF relationship by measuring the bacterial community composition using t-RFLP and multiple ecosystem functions. Generally, our results demonstrated that diversity and dispersal have an interactive and positive effect on ecosystem functioning. In particular, dispersal had a stronger and more pronounced effect on ecosystem functioning when bacterial diversity was low. When evaluating the responses of bacterial community respiration, no significant difference was observed among different treatments, however, there were clear differences in substrate utilization patterns, implying that specific functions, such as decomposing certain substrates, are more sensitive to a perturbation than general functions, such as respiration. Therefore it is important to include multiple functional parameters when studying BEF relationships and, in particular, when applying our knowledge to the conservation of natural environments.