Cohan Frederick M
Department of Biology, Wesleyan University, Middletown, Connecticut 06459-0170, USA.
Annu Rev Microbiol. 2002;56:457-87. doi: 10.1146/annurev.micro.56.012302.160634. Epub 2002 Jan 30.
Bacterial systematics has not yet reached a consensus for defining the fundamental unit of biological diversity, the species. The past half-century of bacterial systematics has been characterized by improvements in methods for demarcating species as phenotypic and genetic clusters, but species demarcation has not been guided by a theory-based concept of species. Eukaryote systematists have developed a universal concept of species: A species is a group of organisms whose divergence is capped by a force of cohesion; divergence between different species is irreversible; and different species are ecologically distinct. In the case of bacteria, these universal properties are held not by the named species of systematics but by ecotypes. These are populations of organisms occupying the same ecological niche, whose divergence is purged recurrently by natural selection. These ecotypes can be discovered by several universal sequence-based approaches. These molecular methods suggest that a typical named species contains many ecotypes, each with the universal attributes of species. A named bacterial species is thus more like a genus than a species.
细菌分类学尚未就界定生物多样性的基本单位——物种达成共识。过去半个世纪的细菌分类学一直以划分物种为表型和基因簇的方法改进为特征,但物种划分并未以基于理论的物种概念为指导。真核生物分类学家已经发展出一个通用的物种概念:物种是一群生物体,其分化受到凝聚力的限制;不同物种之间的分化是不可逆的;并且不同物种在生态上是有区别的。就细菌而言,这些普遍特性并非由分类学中命名的物种所具有,而是由生态型所具有。生态型是占据相同生态位的生物种群,其分化通过自然选择反复消除。这些生态型可以通过几种基于通用序列的方法发现。这些分子方法表明,一个典型的命名物种包含许多生态型,每个生态型都具有物种的普遍属性。因此,一个命名的细菌物种更像是一个属而不是一个种。