Prosser James I, Bohannan Brendan J M, Curtis Tom P, Ellis Richard J, Firestone Mary K, Freckleton Rob P, Green Jessica L, Green Laura E, Killham Ken, Lennon Jack J, Osborn A Mark, Solan Martin, van der Gast Christopher J, Young J Peter W
School of Biological Sciences, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen AB24 3UU, Scotland, UK.
Nat Rev Microbiol. 2007 May;5(5):384-92. doi: 10.1038/nrmicro1643.
Microbial ecology is currently undergoing a revolution, with repercussions spreading throughout microbiology, ecology and ecosystem science. The rapid accumulation of molecular data is uncovering vast diversity, abundant uncultivated microbial groups and novel microbial functions. This accumulation of data requires the application of theory to provide organization, structure, mechanistic insight and, ultimately, predictive power that is of practical value, but the application of theory in microbial ecology is currently very limited. Here we argue that the full potential of the ongoing revolution will not be realized if research is not directed and driven by theory, and that the generality of established ecological theory must be tested using microbial systems.
微生物生态学目前正在经历一场变革,其影响正波及整个微生物学、生态学和生态系统科学领域。分子数据的迅速积累正在揭示出巨大的多样性、大量未培养的微生物群体以及新的微生物功能。这些数据的积累需要运用理论来提供组织架构、结构、机理洞察,并最终提供具有实际价值的预测能力,但目前理论在微生物生态学中的应用非常有限。在此我们认为,如果研究不是由理论指导和驱动,那么这场正在进行的变革的全部潜力将无法实现,而且必须利用微生物系统来检验已确立的生态理论的普遍性。