Emergent loss of microbial biodiversity with increasing resource diversity
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The origin of biodiversity is arguably the most fundamental question in ecology — especially how countless microbial species coexist within a single community. A prevailing hypothesis holds that microbial species coexist by specializing on different resources, thereby reducing competition. Accordingly, increasing resource diversity is expected to promote species coexistence and boost biodiversity. Surprisingly, we observe the opposite: microbial biodiversity often declines as resource diversity increases. This unexpected result emerges from a widespread physiological response across diverse microbial taxa, in which more complex environments trigger higher overall resource uptake. This intensifies competition and drives biodiversity loss. Updating a central ecological model to include this physiological trait accurately reproduces the observed decline. Our findings demonstrate that physiological changes at the individual level can overturn classical ecological principles and scale up to restructure entire ecosystems.