Nutrients strengthen density dependence of per-capita growth and mortality rates in the soil bacterial community.
Bram W G StoneSteven J BlazewiczBenjamin J KochPaul DijkstraMichaela HayerKirsten S HofmockelXiao Jun Allen LiuRebecca L MauJennifer Pett-RidgeEgbert SchwartzBruce A HungatePublished in: Oecologia (2023)
Density dependence in an ecological community has been observed in many macro-organismal ecosystems and is hypothesized to maintain biodiversity but is poorly understood in microbial ecosystems. Here, we analyze data from an experiment using quantitative stable isotope probing (qSIP) to estimate per-capita growth and mortality rates of bacterial populations in soils from several ecosystems along an elevation gradient which were subject to nutrient addition of either carbon alone (glucose; C) or carbon with nitrogen (glucose + ammonium-sulfate; C + N). Across all ecosystems, we found that higher population densities, quantified by the abundance of genomes per gram of soil, had lower per-capita growth rates in C + N-amended soils. Similarly, bacterial mortality rates in C + N-amended soils increased at a significantly higher rate with increasing population size than mortality rates in control and C-amended soils. In contrast to the hypothesis that density dependence would promote or maintain diversity, we observed significantly lower bacterial diversity in soils with stronger negative density-dependent growth. Here, density dependence was significantly but weakly responsive to nutrients and was not associated with higher bacterial diversity.
Keyphrases
- heavy metals
- climate change
- human health
- sewage sludge
- cardiovascular events
- risk assessment
- risk factors
- microbial community
- high resolution
- machine learning
- cardiovascular disease
- coronary artery disease
- adipose tissue
- metabolic syndrome
- single molecule
- cancer therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- big data
- blood pressure
- multidrug resistant
- artificial intelligence
- antibiotic resistance genes