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Lookup NU author(s): Professor Thomas CurtisORCiD, Professor Ian Head, Professor William Sloan
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Two recent, independent advances in ecology have generated interest and controversy: the development of neutral community models (NCMs) and the extension of biogeographical relationships into the microbial world. Here these two advances are linked by predicting an observed microbial taxa-volume relationship using an NCM and provide the strongest evidence so far for neutral community assembly in any group of organisms, macro or micro. Previously, NCMs have only ever been fitted using species-abundance distributions of macroorganisms at a single site or at one scale and parameter values have been calibrated on a case-by-case basis. Because NCMs predict a malleable two-parameter taxa-abundance distribution, this is a weak test of neutral community assembly and, hence, of the predictive power of NCMs. Here the two parameters of an NCM are calibrated using the taxa-abundance distribution observed in a small waterborne bacterial community housed in a bark-lined tree-hole in a beech tree. Using these parameters, unchanged, the taxa-abundance distributions and taxa-volume relationship observed in 26 other beech tree communities whose sizes span three orders of magnitude could be predicted. In doing so, a simple quantitative ecological mechanism to explain observations in microbial ecology is simultaneously offered and the predictive power of NCMs is demonstrated.
Author(s): Woodcock S, van der Gast CJ, Bell T, Lunn M, Curtis TP, Head IM, Sloan WT
Publication type: Article
Publication status: Published
Journal: FEMS Microbiology Ecology
Year: 2007
Volume: 62
Issue: 2
Pages: 171-180
ISSN (print): 0168-6496
ISSN (electronic): 1574-6941
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.
URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1574-6941.2007.00379.x
DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6941.2007.00379.x
Notes: Special Issue: Microorganisms, Macroorganisms and Ecology
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