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Microbial metabolically cohesive consortia and ecosystem functioning

View ORCID ProfileAlberto Pascual-García, Sebastian Bonhoeffer, Thomas Bell
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/859421
Alberto Pascual-García
1Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
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  • ORCID record for Alberto Pascual-García
Sebastian Bonhoeffer
1Institute of Integrative Biology, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
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Thomas Bell
2Department of Life Sciences. Silwood Park Campus. Imperial College London, Ascot, United Kingdom
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  • For correspondence: thomas.bell@imperial.ac.uk
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Abstract

Recent theory and experiments have reported a reproducible tendency for the coexistence of microbial species under controlled environmental conditions. This observation has been explained in the context of competition for resources and metabolic complementarity given that, in microbial communities, many excreted by-products of metabolism may also be resources. Microbial communities therefore play a key role in promoting their own stability and in shaping the niches of the constituent taxa. We suggest that an intermediate level of organisation between the species and the community level may be pervasive, where tightly-knit metabolic interactions create discrete consortia that are stably maintained. We call these units Metabolically Cohesive Consortia (MeCoCos) and we discuss the environmental context in which we expect their formation, and the ecological and evolutionary consequences of their existence. We argue that the ability to identify MeCoCos would open new avenues to link the species-, community-, and ecosystem-level properties, with consequences for our understanding of microbial ecology and evolution, and an improved ability to predict ecosystem functioning in the wild.

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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 4.0 International license.
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Posted November 29, 2019.
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Microbial metabolically cohesive consortia and ecosystem functioning
Alberto Pascual-García, Sebastian Bonhoeffer, Thomas Bell
bioRxiv 859421; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/859421
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Microbial metabolically cohesive consortia and ecosystem functioning
Alberto Pascual-García, Sebastian Bonhoeffer, Thomas Bell
bioRxiv 859421; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/859421

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