Niche and spatial partitioning restrain ecological equivalence among microbes along aquatic redox gradient

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Abstract

Microbial metabolic capabilities and interactions shape their niche hypervolume that in turn governs their ecological strategies and ecosystem services. In the context of functional redundancy or ecological equivalence, the focus has been on functional guilds in order to bypass the complex challenge faced by niche theory for disentangling the niche hypervolume. However, in some cases this simplification has been at the expense of ignoring the role of individual genotype of each microbe within a functional guild and fails to explain how the diversity within each functional guild is maintained. In this study, we inspect the metabolic profile of metagenome-assembled genomes along the pronounced redox gradient of the water column in an anchialine cave. Bridging neutral theory of biodiversity and biogeography and niche theory, our analysis uses focal metabolic capabilities while also incorporating individuality by looking into background metabolic capabilities of each individual and further includes spatial distribution of microbes to delineate their niche space. Our results emphasize that differences in background metabolic capabilities are critical for furnishing the niche hypervolume of microbes carrying the same focal metabolic capability and refute their ecological equivalence with their spatial distribution further enables niche partitioning among them.

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