Frontiers in Environmental Science | |
Trait-Based Model Reproduces Patterns of Population Structure and Diversity of Methane Oxidizing Bacteria in a Stratified Lake | |
Matthias Zimmermann1  Bernhard Wehrli1  Magdalena J. Mayr1  Helmut Bürgmann2  Damien Bouffard2  | |
[1] Department of Environmental Systems Science, ETH Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland;Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Surface Waters—Research and Management, Kastanienbaum, Switzerland; | |
关键词: niche partitioning; microbial kinetics; community assembly; methane affinity; temperature optimum; growth model; | |
DOI : 10.3389/fenvs.2022.833511 | |
来源: DOAJ |
【 摘 要 】
In stratified lakes, methane oxidizing bacteria are critical methane converters that significantly reduce emissions of this greenhouse gas to the atmosphere. Efforts to better understand their ecology uncovered a surprising diversity, vertical structure, and seasonal succession. It is an open question how this diversity has to be considered in models of microbial methane oxidation. Likewise, it is unclear to what extent simple microbial traits related to the kinetics of the oxidation process and temperature optimum, suggested by previous studies, suffice to understand the observed ecology of methane oxidizing bacteria. Here we incorporate niche partitioning in a mechanistic model of seasonal lake mixing and microbial methane oxidation in a stratified lake. Can we model MOB diversity and niche partitioning based on differences in methane oxidation kinetics and temperature adaptation? We found that our model approach can closely reproduce diversity and niche preference patterns of methanotrophs that were observed in seasonally stratified lakes. We show that the combination of trait values resulting in coexisting methanotroph communities is limited to very confined regions within the parameter space of potential trait combinations. However, our model also indicates that the sequence of community assembly, and variations in the stratification and mixing behavior of the lake result in different stable combinations. A scenario analysis introducing variable mixing conditions showed that annual weather conditions and the pre-existing species also affect the developing stable methanotrophic species composition of the lake. Both, effect of pre-existing species and the environmental impact suggest that the MOB community in lakes may differ from year to year, and a stable community may never truly occur. The model further shows that there are always better-adapted species in the trait parameter space that would destabilize and replace an existing stable community. Thus, natural selection may drive trait values into the specific configurations observed in nature based on physiological limits and tradeoffs between traits.
【 授权许可】
Unknown