AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigates how density dependence affects bacterial populations in soil ecosystems, especially under nutrient addition conditions, using a method called quantitative stable isotope probing (qSIP).
  • - Results show that in soils with added nitrogen and carbon, higher bacterial population densities lead to lower growth rates and higher mortality rates, contradicting the expectation that density dependence supports biodiversity.
  • - Overall, the findings suggest that stronger negative density dependence linked to nutrient availability may actually reduce bacterial diversity rather than promote it, indicating a complex relationship between density and ecosystem dynamics in microbial communities.

Article Abstract

Density dependence in an ecological community has been observed in many macro-organismal ecosystems and is hypothesized to maintain biodiversity but is poorly understood in microbial ecosystems. Here, we analyze data from an experiment using quantitative stable isotope probing (qSIP) to estimate per-capita growth and mortality rates of bacterial populations in soils from several ecosystems along an elevation gradient which were subject to nutrient addition of either carbon alone (glucose; C) or carbon with nitrogen (glucose + ammonium-sulfate; C + N). Across all ecosystems, we found that higher population densities, quantified by the abundance of genomes per gram of soil, had lower per-capita growth rates in C + N-amended soils. Similarly, bacterial mortality rates in C + N-amended soils increased at a significantly higher rate with increasing population size than mortality rates in control and C-amended soils. In contrast to the hypothesis that density dependence would promote or maintain diversity, we observed significantly lower bacterial diversity in soils with stronger negative density-dependent growth. Here, density dependence was significantly but weakly responsive to nutrients and was not associated with higher bacterial diversity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00442-023-05322-zDOI Listing

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