Evolutionary Ecology of Plants, Department of Biology, Philipps-University Marburg, Marburg, Germany.
Department of Environment and Biodiversity, Paris-Lodron-University Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria.
Microbiol Spectr. 2024 Oct 3;12(10):e0122724. doi: 10.1128/spectrum.01227-24. Epub 2024 Aug 27.
Dispersal, environmental filtering, and biotic interactions define the species inventory of local communities. Along successional gradients, these assembly processes are predicted to sequentially vary in their relative importance with dispersal as the dominating process early in succession, followed by environmental filtering and biotic interactions at later stages. While observational data from field studies supported this prediction, controlled experiments confirming a sequence of successional processes are still lacking. We designed miniature ecosystems to explicitly test these assumptions under controlled laboratory conditions. Our "Ecosystems on a Plate" (EsoaP) are 3D-printed customized microplates with 24 connected wells allowing us to track dispersal, niche filtering, and biotic interactions among bacteria and plants in time and space. Within EsoaPs, we created heterogeneous habitat landscapes by well-specific nutrient levels or by providing plant seedlings as mutualistic partners in a checkerboard pattern. Bacteria of a single strain were released in one well and subsequently distributed themselves within the plates. We measured the spatial distribution of bacterial abundances at two time points as a function of abiotic or biotic heterogeneity. Bacterial abundance distribution confirmed a shift from initial dispersal-dominated processes to later niche filtering and biotic interactions as more important processes. Our approach follows the principles of as the affordable availability of 3D printers as well as shared STL files makes EsoaPs disseminatable and accessible to all levels of society, facilitating future experimental research.
Hypotheses regarding the underlying processes of ecological successions have primarily emerged from and have been tested in observational studies, lacking substantial support through controlled experiments. The design of such experiments should focus on testing contemporary ecological theories at the intersection of community assembly and successional research. To achieve this, we developed and employed 3D-printed "Ecosystems on a Plate" (EsoaP) within controlled laboratory settings. EsoaPs surmount several limitations of nanoscale instruments that had hindered their application in ecologically meaningful research. By sharing 3D printing designs, experimental protocols, and data openly, we facilitate reproducibility of our experiments by researchers across diverse ecological disciplines. Moreover, our approach facilitates cost-effective replication of experiments, democratizing access to tools for ecological research, and thus holds the potential to serve as a model for future studies and educational purposes.
扩散、环境过滤和生物相互作用决定了当地群落的物种组成。随着演替梯度的发展,这些组装过程的相对重要性预计会依次变化,在演替早期,扩散是主导过程,随后是环境过滤和生物相互作用。虽然来自野外研究的观测数据支持了这一预测,但仍缺乏证实连续演替过程的对照实验。我们设计了微型生态系统,在受控的实验室条件下明确测试这些假设。我们的“盘子上的生态系统”(Ecosystems on a Plate,EsoaP)是 3D 打印的定制微板,有 24 个连接的孔,使我们能够在时间和空间上跟踪细菌和植物之间的扩散、生态位过滤和生物相互作用。在 EsoaP 中,我们通过特定孔的养分水平或通过在棋盘模式下提供植物幼苗作为互惠伙伴来创建异质生境景观。将单一菌株的细菌释放到一个孔中,然后在平板内自行分布。我们测量了细菌丰度的空间分布,作为生物或非生物异质性的两个时间点的函数。细菌丰度分布证实了从初始扩散主导过程向后期生态位过滤和生物相互作用的转变,这些过程变得更为重要。我们的方法遵循了可负担得起的 3D 打印机的可用性以及共享 STL 文件的原则,使得 EsoaP 可以传播和为所有社会阶层所使用,从而促进未来的实验研究。
关于生态演替潜在过程的假设主要源自于观测研究,并在这些研究中得到了检验,缺乏对控制实验的实质性支持。此类实验的设计应侧重于在群落组装和演替研究的交叉点上测试当代生态理论。为了实现这一目标,我们在受控的实验室环境中开发并使用了 3D 打印的“盘子上的生态系统”(Ecosystems on a Plate,EsoaP)。EsoaP 克服了纳米级仪器在生态意义研究中的一些限制。通过公开分享 3D 打印设计、实验方案和数据,我们促进了不同生态学科的研究人员对实验的可重复性。此外,我们的方法还促进了具有成本效益的实验复制,使生态研究工具民主化,因此有可能成为未来研究和教育目的的典范。