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Understanding How Microbiomes Influence The Systems They Inhabit: moving from a correlative to a causal research framework

E.K. Hall, E.S Bernhardt, R.L. Bier, M.A. Bradford, C.M. Boot, J.B. Cotner, P.A. del Giorgio, S.E. Evans, E. B Graham, S.E. Jones, J.T. Lennon, K.J. Locey, D. Nemergut, B.B. Osborne, J.D. Rocca, J.S. Schimel, M.P. Waldrop, M.W. Wallenstein
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/065128
E.K. Hall
1Colorado State University, Fort Collins CO
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  • For correspondence: ed.hall@colostate.edu
E.S Bernhardt
2Duke University, Durham, N.C.
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R.L. Bier
2Duke University, Durham, N.C.
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M.A. Bradford
3Yale University, New Haven, CT, Dept. of Forestry and Environmental Studies
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C.M. Boot
1Colorado State University, Fort Collins CO
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J.B. Cotner
4University of Minnesota, Saint Paul, MN
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P.A. del Giorgio
5Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, CA
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S.E. Evans
6Michigan State University, Hickory Corners, MI
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E. B Graham
2Duke University, Durham, N.C.
7Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado at Boulder
8Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Richland, WA, USA
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S.E. Jones
9Notre Dame University, South Bend, IN
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J.T. Lennon
10Indiana University, Bloomington, IN
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K.J. Locey
10Indiana University, Bloomington, IN
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D. Nemergut
2Duke University, Durham, N.C.
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B.B. Osborne
11Brown University, Providence, RI
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J.D. Rocca
1Colorado State University, Fort Collins CO
2Duke University, Durham, N.C.
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J.S. Schimel
12University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA
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M.P. Waldrop
13U.S. Geological Survey, Menlo Park, CA
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M.W. Wallenstein
1Colorado State University, Fort Collins CO
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Abstract

Translating the ever-increasing wealth of information on microbiomes (environment, host, or built environment) to advance the understanding of system-level processes is proving to be an exceptional research challenge. One reason for this challenge is that relationships between characteristics of microbiomes and the system-level processes they influence are often evaluated in the absence of a robust conceptual framework and reported without elucidating the underlying causal mechanisms. The reliance on correlative approaches limits the potential to expand the inference of a single relationship to additional systems and advance the field. In this perspective piece we propose that research focused on how microbiomes influence the systems they inhabit should work within a common framework and target known microbial processes that contribute to the system-level process of interest. Here we identify three distinct categories of microbiome characteristics (microbial processes, microbial community properties, and microbial membership) and propose a framework to empirically link each of these categories to each other and the broader system level processes they affect. We posit that it is particularly important to distinguish microbial community properties that can be predicted from constituent taxa (community aggregated traits, CATs) from those properties that are currently unable to be predicted from constituent taxa (emergent properties, EPs). We discuss how a series of existing methods in microbial ecology can be applied to more explicitly elucidate properties within each of these categories and connect these three categories of microbial characteristics with each other. We view this proposed framework, gleaned from a breadth of research on environmental microbiomes and ecosystem processes, as a promising pathway with the potential to advance microbiome science across a broad range of disciplines.

Footnotes

  • (ed.hall{at}colostate.edu, claudia.boot{at}colostate.edu, matt.wallenstein{at}colostate.edu)

  • (ebernhar{at}duke.edu, ebgraham2{at}colorado.edu, jennifer.rocca{at}duke.edu)

  • (mark.bradford{at}yale.edu)

  • (cotne002{at}umn.edu)

  • (del_giorgio.paul{at}uqam.ca)

  • (evanssar{at}gmail.com)

  • (sjones20{at}nd.edu)

  • (lennonj{at}indiana.edu, ken{at}weecology.org)

  • (brooke_osborne{at}brown.edu)

  • (josh.schimel{at}lifesci.ucsb.edu)

  • (mwaldrop{at}usgs.gov) Biological Sciences Division

Copyright 
The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
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Posted January 01, 2018.
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Understanding How Microbiomes Influence The Systems They Inhabit: moving from a correlative to a causal research framework
E.K. Hall, E.S Bernhardt, R.L. Bier, M.A. Bradford, C.M. Boot, J.B. Cotner, P.A. del Giorgio, S.E. Evans, E. B Graham, S.E. Jones, J.T. Lennon, K.J. Locey, D. Nemergut, B.B. Osborne, J.D. Rocca, J.S. Schimel, M.P. Waldrop, M.W. Wallenstein
bioRxiv 065128; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/065128
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Understanding How Microbiomes Influence The Systems They Inhabit: moving from a correlative to a causal research framework
E.K. Hall, E.S Bernhardt, R.L. Bier, M.A. Bradford, C.M. Boot, J.B. Cotner, P.A. del Giorgio, S.E. Evans, E. B Graham, S.E. Jones, J.T. Lennon, K.J. Locey, D. Nemergut, B.B. Osborne, J.D. Rocca, J.S. Schimel, M.P. Waldrop, M.W. Wallenstein
bioRxiv 065128; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/065128

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