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File: Ecology Pdf 160958 | Nature Reviews In Microbiology 5, 384 392
perspectives essay many areas in which microorganisms are of environmental and economic importance for example improved quantitative theory the role of ecological theory could increase the efficiency of wastewater treatment ...

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             PERSPECTIVES
             ESSAY                                                                                                   many areas in which microorganisms are of 
                                                                                                                     environmental and economic importance. 
                                                                                                                     For example, improved quantitative theory 
             The role of ecological theory                                                                           could increase the efficiency of wastewater 
                                                                                                                     treatment processes, through the predic-
             in microbial ecology                                                                                    tion of optimal operating conditions and 
                                                                                                                     conditions that are likely to result in system 
                                                                                                                     failure. Quantitative information on the 
             James I. Prosser, Brendan J. M. Bohannan, Tom P. Curtis, Richard J. Ellis,                              links between microbial community structure, 
             Mary K. Firestone, Rob P. Freckleton, Jessica L. Green, Laura E. Green,                                 population dynamics and activities will also 
             Ken Killham, Jack J. Lennon, A. Mark Osborn, Martin Solan,                                              facilitate assessment and, potentially, mitiga-
             Christopher J. van der Gast and J. Peter W. Young                                                       tion of microbial contributions to climate 
                                                                                                                     change, and should lead to quantitative 
             Abstract | Microbial ecology is currently undergoing a revolution, with  predictions of the impact of climate change 
             repercussions spreading throughout microbiology, ecology and ecosystem science.                         on microbial contributions to specific eco-
             The rapid accumulation of molecular data is uncovering vast diversity, abundant                         system processes. Given the high abundance, 
             uncultivated microbial groups and novel microbial functions. This accumulation of                       biomass, diversity and global activities of 
             data requires the application of theory to provide organization, structure,  microorganisms, the ecological theory that 
                                                                                                                     has been developed for plants and animals 
             mechanistic insight and, ultimately, predictive power that is of practical value, but                   is of limited value if it does not apply to 
             the application of theory in microbial ecology is currently very limited. Here we                       microbial communities. Microorganisms 
             argue that the full potential of the ongoing revolution will not be realized if                         arguably provide much better controlled and 
             research is not directed and driven by theory, and that the generality of established                   more manipulable experimental systems 
             ecological theory must be tested using microbial systems.                                               for testing ecological theory than plants 
                                                                                                                     or animals, and such testing is essential to 
                                                                                                                     establish the generality of theory. The use of 
             Bacteria and Archaea have an essential              microbial processes (in, for example,               better controlled microbial systems might 
             role in earth system processes. They are            wastewater treatment, industrial chemical           also generate new theory that is relevant to 
             ubiquitous, possess enormous metabolic and          production, pharmaceutical production and           plants and animals.
             physiological versatility and are essential to      bioremediation), and the realization that               Two factors limit the development of 
             virtually all biogeochemical cycling proc-          many nonspecific microbial processes such           theory in microbial ecology. The first 
             esses — microbial carbon and nitrogen are           as biogeochemical cycling are essential for         is a lack of data and associated insights. 
             calculated to be, respectively, equivalent to       ecosystem sustainability, understanding the         This is due in large part to the difficulties 
             and tenfold as great as the carbon and nitro-       factors that control these processes is crucial.    inherent in observing microorganisms in 
                                  1                        –6
             gen stored in plants . Although small (~10          In our view, this can best be achieved by           nature, which often have few distinguishing 
                                           30
             m), they are abundant (>10  individuals             generating theory that is based on existing         morphological features and often cannot 
             globally). Their phylogenetic and physiologi-       observations and subsequent experimental            be cultivated in the laboratory. The applica-
             cal diversity is considerably greater than that     validation.                                         tion of cultivation-independent molecular 
             of animals and plants and their interactions                                                            techniques and their successors — genom-
             with other life forms are correspondingly           The importance of theory                            ics, metagenomics, transcriptomics and 
             more complex.                                       Theory is used to classify, interpret and           proteomics — has generated a plethora of 
                 Understanding the ecology of micro-             predict the world around us. Without it,            new and more comprehensive observations 
             organisms is arguably one of the most               microbial ecology is merely the accumula-           of microorganisms in nature, but we still 
             compelling intellectual challenges facing           tion of situation-bound statements that             lack the theoretical tools required to detect 
             contemporary ecology. Although worthy for           are of limited predictive ability, providing        underlying principles and mechanisms. 
             its intellectual merits alone, developing such      microbiologists with few insights. Theory           The second factor is cultural, in that the 
             an understanding is essential to meet many          has an essential role in developing an under-       tools and disciplines of ecological theory 
             of the major challenges facing human society        standing of, and explaining the interactions        are not part of the contemporary mindset 
             today, such as the management of natural            between, microorganisms and their physical,         in microbiology. Ecological theory and 
             ecosystems and the mitigation of climate            chemical and biological environments.               quantitative reasoning typically form only 
             change. Despite this, the application of theory     This understanding will be lacking if it is         minor components of education in microbi-
             is severely lacking in microbial ecology            solely qualitative, and a full understanding        ology, and microbiologists have traditionally 
             where, paradoxically, it is required most. Just     therefore requires quantitative theory.             used a detailed, reductionist approach that 
             as ecological theory arose from natural his-            Theory generates predictions that can be        is based on understanding physiological 
             tory to draw generalized conclusions from           of practical value for policy makers, stake-        mechanisms, with relatively little attention 
             specific observations of organisms in their         holders and society. A striking example is the      paid to theory. Although the challenge 
             environment, so microbiologists need theory         use of epidemiological models to predict            for the microbial ecologist might appear 
             to interpret the plethora of observations           the spread of human and plant pathogens             to be the discovery (or recollection) of ever-
             that have been made since van Leeuwenhoek           and the use of these predictions to inform and      more fascinating details of a given system, 
                                                                                              2
             first saw animalcules more than 300 years         implement control policies . There is similar       the theoretician aims to predict as much as 
             ago. With the increasing reliance on specific       potential value in applying theory in the           possible about a system using as few of these 
             384 | MAY 2007 | VOLUME 5                              © 2007 Nature Publishing Group                                    www.nature.com/reviews/micro
                 
                                                                                                                           PERSPECTIVES
             details as possible; but the populations and      systems and allow the much more effective         might not lead to simple mapping between 
             structures of microbial communities, by           management of the natural world.                  molecular markers and an ecological niche. 
             comparison with those of plants and ani-             In the following sections we discuss           More crucially, speciation, and ecological 
             mals, remain inscrutable. The application of      examples of areas of ecological theory that       species definitions, must consider bacterial 
             molecular techniques has demonstrated the         might be particularly valuable in microbial       gene-transfer processes, which are erratic 
             need for discovery research, but in our view      ecology. In doing this, we attempt to deter-      and transfer only a small part of the genome. 
             this can only be exploited if it is directed      mine whether the particular characteristics       They provide a potential mechanism for 
             by insights gained from the application of        of microorganisms present difficulties in         maintaining biological species in Mayrs 
                                                                                                                       8
             theory.                                           applying ecological theory that has been          sense , because an incoming gene can 
                                                               developed for plants and higher animals.          replace the homologous copy in the genome, 
             Current ecological theory                         We consider whether and where new theory          maintaining the genetic cohesion of the 
             An established body of theory exists for          might be required for microorganisms to           species. In addition, these processes can also 
             plant and animal ecology but the differ-          enhance or replace established ecological         result in the horizontal transfer of genes with 
             ences between microorganisms and large          theory. We also identify conceptual and           no counterpart in the recipient that can be 
             organisms, and the extent to which these dif-     practical challenges faced by microbial           maintained on a plasmid or integrated by 
             ferences restrict the applicability of existing   ecologists in applying quantitative ecological    non-homologous recombination. However, 
             theory to microbial ecology, often form an        theory.                                           the importance of homologous recombina-
             impasse that is tacitly accepted and seldom                                                         tion and horizontal transfer varies widely 
             questioned. Commonly cited differences            Ecological species concepts                       among well-studied bacterial species, and 
             include the small size of microorganisms,         Most ecological theory depends on a con-          perhaps even more so among the uncultured 
             high rates of population growth, high rates       cept of species: population ecology counts        masses in the environment. This hetero-
             and extent of dispersal, the vast abundance       individuals within species whereas com-           geneity is one reason why we are still far 
             of microorganisms, and the unique aspects of      munity ecology and macroecology count             from a consensus on the nature of bacterial 
             their biology (such as parasexuality or           the number of species. Species are most           species, as revealed at a recent Royal Society 
                                                                                                                 discussion meeting9
             extremely hardy resting stages). However,         commonly defined through the biological                                .
             the breadth of distribution of many of these      species concept promoted by Mayr4. This is            A consequence of gene transfer is that 
             traits among microorganisms in nature is          a genetic definition that envisages a species     the bacterial genome is thought to consist 
             not known. Furthermore, the existence of          as a group of interbreeding individuals that      of two distinct parts, the core genome and 
                                                                                                                                        10
             these traits does not necessarily prevent the     is isolated from other such groups by bar-        the accessory genome . The core genome 
             application of existing ecological theory         riers to recombination. If genetic exchange       comprises genes that are essential in most 
             to microorganisms (see later discussion of        within a species is sufficiently extensive,       circumstances and might form the basis for 
                         seed banks). Also, the relatively     and that between species is sufficiently low,     Mayrian species that maintain coherence 
             spores and 
             large scales of time and space over which         species will be relatively homogeneous in         through homologous recombination. The 
             most microorganisms are studied does              themselves and ecologically distinct from         accessory genome encodes special ecological 
             not necessarily preclude the application of       other species. Unfortunately, prokaryotes         adaptations in genes that are readily gained 
             existing theory; theory related to the subdis-    (and some eukaryotes) are asexual, thereby        and lost. Strains that belong to the same 
             cipline of ecology called macroecology was        violating these assumptions, and do not           species, as defined by their core genome, can 
             developed specifically to further the under-      form species in this genetic way. An              differ in the presence and absence of hun-
             standing of ecology on large scales of space      alternative, the ecological species concept,      dreds of accessory genes, and consequently 
             and time (see below). The challenge facing        defines a species as a set of individuals         can have different ecological capabilities. 
             microbial ecologists, and indeed all ecolo-       that can be considered to be identical in all     According to this view, Cohans ecotypes are 
             gists, is to match the appropriate theoretical                                            5 has     merely temporary lineages with particular 
                                                               relevant ecological properties. Cohan
             approach to the organism, system, scale and       argued that bacteria have ecological species      constellations of accessory genes, and the 
             question of interest.                             (ecotypes). He postulates that bacteria         ecological niche cannot explain the apparent 
                Microbial model systems have played an         occupy discrete niches and that periodic          cohesion of species that are defined by the 
             important, although often underappreci-           selection will purge genetic variation                                     11.
                                                                                                                 phylogeny of core genes
             ated, part in the development of existing         within each niche without preventing                  Surveys of 16S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) 
             ecological theory (reviewed in REF. 3),           divergence between the inhabitants of dif-        gene sequences have demonstrated the huge 
             demonstrating its general applicability to        ferent niches. So, genetically and ecologi-       diversity of bacterial communities, but if 
             microorganisms. However, it is less common        cally distinct species will arise, provided       much of the interesting ecological adapta-
             for existing theory to be applied to micro-       there is little or no recombination, and          tion is conferred by the accessory genome 
             organisms in nature despite the fact that this    ecological theories that assume such spe-         then the true ecological diversity exists in the 
             would be valuable. It would be extraordinar-      cies should apply to bacteria. This also          rich brew of catabolic plasmids, resistance 
             ily inefficient to attempt to reinvent existing   predicts that molecular diversity should          transposons and pathogenesis islands. These 
             theory for application to microorganisms.         relate directly to ecological diversity.          can be shared among disparate bacteria in an 
             Furthermore, the application of existing             Cohans ecotypes depend on discrete            environment that favours them, but can be 
             theory would afford ecologists the opportu-       niches but speciation is more difficult to        absent in the same bacterial species growing 
             nity to test the true generality of ecological    envisage when the relevant environmental          elsewhere. The methods of evolutionary 
             principles and to create a synthetic ecology      variables are continuous. Bacterial speciation    ecology have been applied to the interaction 
             that spans all organisms. This would greatly      in these situations could be explored using       between these accessory elements and their 
             increase our understanding of ecological          the theory of adaptive dynamics6,7, but this      host bacteria. For example, Bergstrom and 
             NATURE REVIEWS | MICROBIOLOGY                        © 2007 Nature Publishing Group                                     VOLUME 5 | MAY 2007 | 385
                   
               PERSPECTIVES
                                                                                                                                                                                       17
                Box 1 | Theoretical approaches for estimating diversity in a sample                                                hybridization (BOX 1). Gans and colleagues  
                                                                                                                                   highlight the requirement for collectors 
                A species abundance curve is simply a graph in               a  Species curve                                      curves of in excess of one million PCR-
                which the abundance of a particular species is                    Area under species curve = S                     derived clones to ensure coverage of 80% of 
                                                                                                             t
                plotted on the x axis and the number of species at                                                                 bacterial species within a 1-g soil sample. 
                that abundance is plotted on the y axis (see                                                                       Without screening large numbers of clones, 
                figure). The observation and contemplation of                                        1/a                           sampling low-abundance species remains a 
                these distributions is supported by a rich literature                                                              matter of chance.
                in conventional ecology in which some research,                                                                        16S rRNA gene sequences provide an 
                but not all, has imbued such distributions with                   Log  (N  )       Log  (N )      Log  (N  )
                some ecological meaning. However, microbial                           2  min          2   0          2   max       operational measure of species. High-
                                                                                                                                                                18
                ecologists have an interest in species abundance               Number of species S                                 throughput sequencing  or SARST (serial 
                                                                                                                                                                           19
                curves because the area underneath a species                                                                       analysis of ribosomal sequence tags)  are 
                abundance curve is the total diversity. This                                                                       currently the best suited techniques for 
                presents us with a ‘catch 22’ situation: we cannot              0         5        10        15       20           estimating prokaryotic diversity. However, 
                measure abundances, so do not know the species–                           Log  (bacterial abundance)               strains or isolates with identical 16S rRNA 
                                                                                              2
                area curve, so we cannot estimate diversity.                 b Individuals curve                                   gene sequences can have different physiolog-
                  In the absence of data, we can assume that a                                                                     ical characteristics of ecological importance 
                                                                                                                      N
                particular distribution, for example a log-normal                                                       max        and methods with greater taxonomic resolu-
                distribution, applies. We can then make an                                                                         tion are therefore required. Approaches 
                estimate on that basis. Guessing distributions is                                                                                             20,21
                not a wholly satisfactory procedure. Consequently,                                                                 such as pyrosequencing        , which address 
                others have sought to fit a line to, and extrapolate              Area under individuals curve = N                 diversity across entire metagenomes, might 
                                                                                                                t                  be appropriate and could suggest alterna-
                from, abundance data (typically clone libraries) 
                                   17                                                                                              tive conceptual approaches to diversity. 
                available to them .
                  Unfortunately, clone libraries in microbial                  Number of individuals                               Many ecological questions require infor-
                                             3                                                                                     mation on specific phylogenetic groups 
                ecology are so small (<10 ) and microbial 
                communities so large (>1015) that the sample                                                                       or functional groups, such as rhizobia or 
                distribution is unlikely to look like the                       0         5        10        15       20           ammonia oxidizers, which might increase 
                community from which it was drawn. An                                     Log  (bacterial abundance)               tractability. 
                alternative approach to estimating species                                    2                                        Many of the key questions in microbial 
                abundance curves is to examine the                                                                                 community ecology require reliable estima-
                                                                                       17
                reassociation kinetics of DNA extracted from an environment . This approach involves                               tion of species richness. Analysis of species 
                denaturing DNA, separating the two strands of the DNA molecule, and then allowing them to                          abundance curves and the lack of a universal 
                reassociate. The most abundant sequences should reassociate first and the reassociation                            definition of species highlight the practical 
                kinetics therefore reflect the underlying distribution of similar sequences and, consequently,                     and conceptual difficulties associated with 
                the genomic diversity. However, for experimental reasons, only the reassociation of a small                        such estimates. The analyses described 
                proportion of the diversity can be observed. Consequently, the bulk of the curve is extrapolated 
                from a few taxa. It can be plausibly argued that this means that there is a great deal of                          above provide the basis for quantifying 
                uncertainty about the unobserved portion of the species abundance curve.                                           species richness and for assessing the cost 
                  The figure shows a log-normal species abundance curve and corresponding cumulative individuals                   and feasibility of quantification. 
                curve. 1/a is the width of the species curve, where a is the spread parameter. N         is the abundance of 
                                                                                                     min
                the least abundant species; N       is the abundance of the most abundant species; and N  is the modal             Spatial scale
                                                max                                                           0
                species abundance. Figure reproduced with permission from REF. 16 © (2002) US National Academy                     The pivotal role of spatial patterns and 
                of Sciences.                                                                                                       processes in ecology is widely recognized. 
                                                                                                                                   Many systems, such as fragmented habitats 
               colleagues12 discussed the conditions for                 describe microbial diversity within any                   and populations, cannot be studied without 
               plasmid maintenance, and a recent theoreti-               given environment. The sheer complex-                     a serious consideration of space. This has 
               cal exploration concludes that the evolu-                ity of most environments, and the rapid                   generated the subdiscipline of landscape 
               tionary arms race between bacteria and                   realization that collectors curves of cloned             ecology (which has recently been applied 
               bacteriophages can result in speciation of                environmental 16S rRNA gene sequences                     to ecological aspects of antibiotic resistance 
                        13                                                                                                                      22
               the host . This presents a major challenge to             would give complete coverage only in the                  in bacteria ), the metapopulation paradigm 
                                                                                                                                                                   23,24
               those studying prokaryotic population and                 very simplest ecosystems, has necessitated                and metacommunity theory            . Other 
               community ecology. The current solution is                the development of a more theoretical basis               research areas focus directly on the role 
               to use operational definitions of taxonomic               for estimating prokaryotic diversity. To this             of spatial scaling in ecological patterns. 
               units but we are a long way from a coherent               end, Dunbar and colleagues15 and Curtis                   For example, species–area relationships 
                                                                                           16
               body of theory that relates the fluid nature of           and colleagues  pioneered the use of species              (SARs) have a long history in ecology (see 
               bacterial genomes to the ecology of bacterial             abundance curves that use log-normal rela-                for example REFS 25–27). A SAR describing 
               communities.                                              tionships (which will include some taxa that              areas with relatively few species in com-
                                                                                                                                                                            28
                                                                         are rare and others that are present in high              mon has greater species turnover  and is 
               Measuring diversity and species richness                  numbers) to provide theoretical estimates                 steeper than a SAR with more species in 
               Since the estimation of substantial micro-                of prokaryotic diversity, yielding diversity              common; steepness therefore describes 
                                             14
               bial diversity within soils , microbial                   estimates that are similar to those derived by            how quickly local assemblages of species 
               ecologists have yearned to quantify and                   Torsvik and colleagues14 using DNA–DNA                    differentiate in space.
               386 | MAY 2007 | VOLUME 5                                    © 2007 Nature Publishing Group                                           www.nature.com/reviews/micro
                 
                                                                                                                            PERSPECTIVES
                The spatial scaling of microbial diversity      increased and decreased taxonomic diver-           in some instances resemble that of plants 
             is now being addressed by coupling the             sity of bacteria in aquatic mesocosms and          and animals. Further studies are required 
             molecular characterization of microbial            that the shape of the relationship between         to determine the mechanisms underlying 
             communities with macroecological theory29.         productivity and diversity differed between        microbial species richness and the influence 
             Compared with plants and animals, few SAR          bacterial taxa. These initial results suggest      of nutrient supply (for example, that associ-
             studies have been published for microorgan-        that bacterial diversity can vary with energy      ated with eutrophication) on microbial species 
             isms, making a balanced comparison of              and that the nature of the relationship can        richness and diversity.
             SAR patterns between the different groups 
             difficult. The SAR is commonly assumed              Box 2 | Theoretical approaches for estimating microbial species…area relationships
                                                       z
             to follow a power-law of the form S ∝ A , 
             where S is species richness, A is area and z                          Contiguous habitats                                Islands 
             is the slope of the curve. Empirical evidence          0.3
             suggests that for animals and plants within 
             contiguous habitats, z is generally in the 
             range of 0.1 to 0.2, and for discrete islands z 
             is steeper (0.2 < z < 0.39) (REF. 27), although 
             a new meta-analysis of SAR slopes sug-                )0.2
             gests that this difference might not be as            z
                                                 30
             pronounced as previously thought  (BOX 2).            Slope (
             This study also confirmed a general trend in 
             the increasing steepness of z with increasing          0.1
             body size from ciliates to large mammals. 
             Recent research has documented power-law 
             species–area (or more generally, taxa–area) 
                                                 31,32              0.0
             relationships in fungi and bacteria                                                                                 or                k
                                              29,33–36                      sh                                                 ct         e      tan       ls
             and bacteria in island habitats     . The                     a               oil                          a    a  a        a    p 
                                                                                                                ants  e       e       eehol                 ants
                                                                            eri     oms                es               eri     eri   r  eri  um eria       pl
             z values estimated in studies of contiguous               Saltmar      t                 t                                                Anima
                                                                                Marine            Marine  Animals   Lak    Bior      T       S
                                                                          ct       a     Arid s       a                ct      ct       ct       ct
             habitats were much lower than those of                      ba       di       fungi    cili    and pl    ba     ba        ba      ba       and
             island habitats, but island z values were simi-     Despite the theoretical and practical importance of species–area relationships (SARs), which 
             lar in magnitude to those observed for plants       relate an area (A) to the number of species (S) found within this area, they are difficult to quantify 
             and animals. More research is required              directly at ecologically relevant scales (see figure for a comparison of some microbial SARs from 
             to establish whether microorganisms are             different contiguous habitats and islands). For organisms with the extraordinary abundance and 
             distributed spatially in ways that are similar      diversity of microorganisms, this poses a challenge even at the scale of a single environmental 
             to plant and animal species, but one study          sample. Microbial ecologists (and plant and animal ecologists) must therefore use theoretical 
             indicates that soil community composition is        approaches to estimate SARs.
             non-random at a continental scale, and that           The most straightforward analyses of microbial SARs are direct plots of sample data (see for 
                                                                 example 
             soil community composition and diversity                     REF. 35). These analyses assume that the slope of the observed sample SAR parallels the 
             at large scales can be predicted primarily on       slope that would result from a complete census. For a power-law SAR (in which the number of 
                                                                                                             z
                                                37               species is a constant power of the area (S ∝ A ; where z is the slope of the curve)), this translates to 
             the basis of a single variable (pH) . Such          an assumption that the observed species richness in a sample is a constant proportion of the total 
             patterns differ from those of plants and            species richness in the area from which it was sampled, and that this constant proportion is not 
             animals, the biogeographical distributions          affected by scale.
             of which are influenced by site temperature           Parametric approaches are also commonly used to estimate the increase of species richness 
             and latitude.                                       with sample size (or sampling area) (BOX 1). In short, sample data are fitted to models of 
                                                                 relative abundance (or assumed on theoretical grounds), and this sample frequency 
             Diversity…energy relationships                      distribution is projected to estimate the number of unobserved species in the community70. 
             In addition to relationships between diver-         Parametric approaches assume that the sample frequency distribution is a truncated version 
             sity and area, common patterns have been            of the community-level distribution, which in turn assumes that individuals are randomly 
             described between diversity and energy.             sampled from the community. In many studies this assumption can be seriously violated. 
             For example, primary productivity (the              Microbial communities are commonly investigated by identifying individuals from soil or 
             rate of energy capture and carbon fixa-             sediment cores across a landscape. Even if these environmental samples are randomly 
             tion by primary producers) is thought to            distributed in space, spatial aggregation in microbial populations will result in a non-random 
             be a key determinant of plant and animal            sample of individuals from the community.
                                                                   An alternative approach to estimating SARs is to examine patterns of community turnover 
                          27,38
             biodiversity    . A positive quadratic or           across a landscape (the distance–decay relationship). This method has been applied to estimate 
             hump-shaped relationship is frequently              SARs at local, regional and global scales (reviewed in REF. 29). Recent studies have shown that 
                                                                                                                    71
             observed between productivity and diversity,        distance–decay methods underestimate SAR slopes , which suggests the need for further 
             in which diversity peaks at intermediate            theoretical work in this area.
                          27                                                                                                                                 32
             productivity , although other patterns have           The figure shows the slopes of the SARs for contiguous habitat studies of saltmarsh bacteria , 
                                                                                72              29                   72
                                 39,40                           marine diatoms , arid soil fungi , and marine ciliates  compared with the slopes of the SARs for 
             also been observed     . Bacterial communi-                                              36                                          34
             ties also exhibit such diversity–energy rela-       island habitat studies of lake bacteria , wastewater treatment bioreactor bacteria , treehole 
                                                                         35                               33
             tionships. Horner-Devine and colleagues41           bacteria  and coolant sump tank bacteria . The blue bars show typical values for studies of 
                                                                                                        26
             observed that increasing productivity both          animals and plants in these two habitats .
             NATURE REVIEWS | MICROBIOLOGY                         © 2007 Nature Publishing Group                                     VOLUME 5 | MAY 2007 | 387
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...Perspectives essay many areas in which microorganisms are of environmental and economic importance for example improved quantitative theory the role ecological could increase efficiency wastewater treatment processes through predic microbial ecology tion optimal operating conditions that likely to result system failure information on james i prosser brendan j m bohannan tom p curtis richard ellis links between community structure mary k firestone rob freckleton jessica l green laura e population dynamics activities will also ken killham jack lennon a mark osborn martin solan facilitate assessment potentially mitiga christopher van der gast peter w young contributions climate change should lead abstract is currently undergoing revolution with predictions impact repercussions spreading throughout microbiology ecosystem science specific eco rapid accumulation molecular data uncovering vast diversity abundant given high abundance uncultivated groups novel functions this biomass global requ...

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