Dykhuizen D E
Department of Ecology and Evolution, State University of New York at Stony Brook 11794-5245, USA.
Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek. 1998 Jan;73(1):25-33. doi: 10.1023/a:1000665216662.
The diversity of bacteria in the world is very poorly known. Usually less than one percent of the bacteria from natural communities can be grown in the laboratory. This has caused us to underestimate bacterial diversity and biased our view of bacterial communities. The tools are now available to estimate the number of bacterial species in a community and to estimate the difference between communities. Using what data are available, I have estimated that thirty grams of forest soil contains over half a million species. The species difference between related communities suggests that the number of species of bacteria may be more than a thousand million. I suppose that the explanation for such a large number of bacterial species is simply that speciation in bacteria is easy and extinction difficult, giving a rate of speciation higher than the rate of extinction, leading to an ever increasing number of species over time. The idea that speciation is easy is justified from the results of recent experimental work in bacterial evolution.
世界上细菌的多样性鲜为人知。通常,来自自然群落的细菌中,只有不到1% 能够在实验室中培养。这导致我们低估了细菌的多样性,并使我们对细菌群落的看法产生了偏差。现在已有工具可用于估计群落中细菌物种的数量,并估计不同群落之间的差异。利用现有的数据,我估计30克森林土壤中包含超过50万个物种。相关群落之间的物种差异表明,细菌物种的数量可能超过10亿种。我认为,细菌物种数量如此之多的原因很简单,即细菌的物种形成容易,灭绝困难,导致物种形成速率高于灭绝速率,随着时间的推移,物种数量不断增加。物种形成容易这一观点,从细菌进化的近期实验工作结果中得到了证实。