Department of Natural Resource Sciences, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec H9X 3V9, Canada.
National Research Council Canada, Energy, Mining and Environment, 6100 Royalmount Avenue, Montreal, Quebec H4P 2R2, Canada.
Biology (Basel). 2013 Mar 27;2(2):533-54. doi: 10.3390/biology2020533.
Intermicrobial competition is known to occur in many natural environments, and can result from direct conflict between organisms, or from differential rates of growth, colonization, and/or nutrient acquisition. It has been difficult to extensively examine intermicrobial competition in situ, but these interactions may play an important role in the regulation of the many biogeochemical processes that are tied to microbial communities in polar soils. A greater understanding of how competition influences productivity will improve projections of gas and nutrient flux as the poles warm, may provide biotechnological opportunities for increasing the degradation of contaminants in polar soil, and will help to predict changes in communities of higher organisms, such as plants.
微生物间的竞争存在于许多自然环境中,其产生的原因可能是生物体之间的直接冲突,也可能是由于生长、定殖和/或养分获取的速度不同。在现场广泛研究微生物间的竞争一直存在困难,但这些相互作用可能在极地土壤微生物群落相关的许多生物地球化学过程的调节中发挥重要作用。深入了解竞争如何影响生产力,将有助于预测极地变暖时气体和养分通量的变化,为增加极地土壤中污染物的降解提供生物技术机会,并有助于预测高等生物(如植物)群落的变化。