The Western English Channel contains a persistent microbial seed bank
Open Access
- 10 November 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in The ISME Journal
- Vol. 6 (6) , 1089-1093
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ismej.2011.162
Abstract
Robust seasonal dynamics in microbial community composition have previously been observed in the English Channel L4 marine observatory. These could be explained either by seasonal changes in the taxa present at the L4 site, or by the continuous modulation of abundance of taxa within a persistent microbial community. To test these competing hypotheses, deep sequencing of 16S rRNA from one randomly selected time point to a depth of 10 729 927 reads was compared with an existing taxonomic survey data covering 6 years. When compared against the 6-year survey of 72 shallow sequenced time points, the deep sequenced time point maintained 95.4% of the combined shallow OTUs. Additionally, on average, 99.75%±0.06 (mean±s.d.) of the operational taxonomic units found in each shallow sequenced sample were also found in the single deep sequenced sample. This suggests that the vast majority of taxa identified in this ecosystem are always present, but just in different proportions that are predictable. Thus observed changes in community composition are actually variations in the relative abundance of taxa, not, as was previously believed, demonstrating extinction and recolonization of taxa in the ecosystem through time.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Defining seasonal marine microbial community dynamicsThe ISME Journal, 2011
- Activity of abundant and rare bacteria in a coastal oceanProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2011
- Moving pictures of the human microbiomeGenome Biology, 2011
- Sequence-specific error profile of Illumina sequencersNucleic Acids Research, 2011
- Rapidly denoising pyrosequencing amplicon reads by exploiting rank-abundance distributionsNature Methods, 2010
- Global patterns of 16S rRNA diversity at a depth of millions of sequences per sampleProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010
- A latitudinal diversity gradient in planktonic marine bacteriaProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Annually reoccurring bacterial communities are predictable from ocean conditionsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Microbial diversity in the deep sea and the underexplored “rare biosphere”Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2006
- Greengenes, a Chimera-Checked 16S rRNA Gene Database and Workbench Compatible with ARBApplied and Environmental Microbiology, 2006