Climate mediates continental scale patterns of stream microbial functional diversity
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Picazo Mota, Félix; Vilmi, Annika; Aalto, Juha; Soininen, Janne; Casamayor, Emilio O.; Liu, Yongqin; Wu, Qinglong; Ren, Lijuan; Zhou, Jizhong; Shen, Ji; Wang, JianjunEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Stream biofilm Elevational gradients Microbial functional gene
Fecha
2020-06-13Referencia bibliográfica
Picazo, F., Vilmi, A., Aalto, J. et al. Climate mediates continental scale patterns of stream microbial functional diversity. Microbiome 8, 92 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-020-00873-2
Patrocinador
National Natural Science Foundation of China (91851117); Program of Global Change and Mitigation (2017YFA0605200); CAS Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences (QYZDB- SSW-DQC043); CAS Strategic Pilot Science and Technology (XDA20050101); National Natural Science Foundation of China (41571058, 41871048); Chinese Academy of Sciences President’s International Fellowship Initiative (2018PS0007); BRIDGES CGL2015-69043-P (Spanish Office for Science-MINECO-ERDF)Resumen
Background: Understanding the large-scale patterns of microbial functional diversity is essential for anticipating
climate change impacts on ecosystems worldwide. However, studies of functional biogeography remain scarce for
microorganisms, especially in freshwater ecosystems. Here we study 15,289 functional genes of stream biofilm
microbes along three elevational gradients in Norway, Spain and China.
Results: We find that alpha diversity declines towards high elevations and assemblage composition shows
increasing turnover with greater elevational distances. These elevational patterns are highly consistent across
mountains, kingdoms and functional categories and exhibit the strongest trends in China due to its largest
environmental gradients. Across mountains, functional gene assemblages differ in alpha diversity and
composition between the mountains in Europe and Asia. Climate, such as mean temperature of the warmest
quarter or mean precipitation of the coldest quarter, is the best predictor of alpha diversity and assemblage
composition at both mountain and continental scales, with local non-climatic predictors gaining more
importance at mountain scale. Under future climate, we project substantial variations in alpha diversity and
assemblage composition across the Eurasian river network, primarily occurring in northern and central regions,
respectively.
Conclusions: We conclude that climate controls microbial functional gene diversity in streams at large spatial
scales; therefore, the underlying ecosystem processes are highly sensitive to climate variations, especially at
high latitudes. This biogeographical framework for microbial functional diversity serves as a baseline to
anticipate ecosystem responses and biogeochemical feedback to ongoing climate change.





