Acosta Francisco, Zamor Richard M, Najar Fares Z, Roe Bruce A, Hambright K David
Program in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019; Plankton Ecology and Limnology Laboratory, Department of Biology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019;
Advanced Center for Genome Technology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019; Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Oklahoma, Norman, OK 73019.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Sep 15;112(37):11594-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1505204112. Epub 2015 Aug 31.
The ecological dynamics underlying species invasions have been a major focus of research in macroorganisms for the last five decades. However, we still know little about the processes behind invasion by unicellular organisms. To expand our knowledge of microbial invasions, we studied the roles of propagule pressure, nutrient supply, and biotic resistance in the invasion success of a freshwater invasive alga, Prymnesium parvum, using microcosms containing natural freshwater microbial assemblages. Microcosms were subjected to a factorial design with two levels of nutrient-induced diversity and three levels of propagule pressure, and incubated for 7 d, during which P. parvum densities and microbial community composition were tracked. Successful invasion occurred in microcosms receiving high propagule pressure whereas nutrients or community diversity played no role in invasion success. Invaded communities experienced distinctive changes in composition compared with communities where the invasion was unsuccessful. Successfully invaded microbial communities had an increased abundance of fungi and ciliates, and decreased abundances of diatoms and cercozoans. Many of these changes mirrored the microbial community changes detected during a natural P. parvum bloom in the source system. This role of propagule pressure is particularly relevant for P. parvum in the reservoir-dominated southern United States because this species can form large, sustained blooms that can generate intense propagule pressures for downstream sites. Human impact and global climate change are currently causing widespread environmental changes in most southern US freshwater systems that may facilitate P. parvum establishment and, when coupled with strong propagule pressure, could put many more systems at risk for invasion.
在过去的五十年里,物种入侵背后的生态动力学一直是大型生物研究的主要焦点。然而,我们对单细胞生物入侵背后的过程仍然知之甚少。为了扩展我们对微生物入侵的认识,我们使用含有天然淡水微生物群落的微观世界,研究了繁殖体压力、养分供应和生物抗性在淡水入侵藻类——微小原甲藻入侵成功过程中的作用。微观世界采用析因设计,设置了两个水平的养分诱导多样性和三个水平的繁殖体压力,并培养7天,在此期间跟踪微小原甲藻的密度和微生物群落组成。在接受高繁殖体压力的微观世界中发生了成功入侵,而养分或群落多样性对入侵成功没有作用。与入侵未成功的群落相比,被入侵的群落组成发生了显著变化。成功入侵的微生物群落中真菌和纤毛虫的丰度增加,硅藻和丝足虫的丰度降低。其中许多变化反映了在源系统中自然发生的微小原甲藻水华期间检测到的微生物群落变化。繁殖体压力的这种作用对于美国南部以水库为主的地区的微小原甲藻尤为重要,因为该物种可以形成大规模、持续的水华,从而对下游地点产生强烈的繁殖体压力。目前,人类影响和全球气候变化正在美国南部大多数淡水系统中造成广泛的环境变化,这可能会促进微小原甲藻的定殖,并且当与强大的繁殖体压力相结合时,可能会使更多的系统面临入侵风险。