prey diversity
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

55
(FIVE YEARS 15)

H-INDEX

14
(FIVE YEARS 2)

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (10) ◽  
pp. 2079
Author(s):  
Ramith R. Nair ◽  
Gregory J. Velicer

Predator impacts on prey diversity are often studied among higher organisms over short periods, but microbial predator-prey systems allow examination of prey-diversity dynamics over evolutionary timescales. We previously showed that Escherichia coli commonly evolved minority mucoid phenotypes in response to predation by the bacterial predator Myxococcus xanthus by one time point of a coevolution experiment now named MyxoEE-6. Here we examine mucoid frequencies across several MyxoEE-6 timepoints to discriminate between the hypotheses that mucoids were increasing to fixation, stabilizing around equilibrium frequencies, or heading to loss toward the end of MyxoEE-6. In four focal coevolved prey populations, mucoids rose rapidly early in the experiment and then fluctuated within detectable minority frequency ranges through the end of MyxoEE-6, generating frequency dynamics suggestive of negative frequency-dependent selection. However, a competition experiment between mucoid and non-mucoid clones found a predation-specific advantage of the mucoid clone that was insensitive to frequency over the examined range, leaving the mechanism that maintains minority mucoidy unresolved. The advantage of mucoidy under predation was found to be associated with reduced population size after growth (productivity) in the absence of predators, suggesting a tradeoff between productivity and resistance to predation that we hypothesize may reverse mucoid vs non-mucoid fitness ranks within each MyxoEE-6 cycle. We also found that mucoidy was associated with diverse colony phenotypes and diverse candidate mutations primarily localized in the exopolysaccharide operon yjbEFGH. Collectively, our results show that selection from predatory bacteria can generate apparently stable sympatric phenotypic polymorphisms within coevolving prey populations and also allopatric diversity across populations by selecting for diverse mutations and colony phenotypes associated with mucoidy. More broadly, our results suggest that myxobacterial predation increases long-term diversity within natural microbial communities.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Astrid V. Stronen ◽  
Barbara Molnar ◽  
Paolo Ciucci ◽  
Chris T. Darimont ◽  
Lorenza Grottoli ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lixin Gong ◽  
Biye Shi ◽  
Hui Wu ◽  
Jiang Feng ◽  
Tinglei Jiang
Keyword(s):  

Diversity ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 16
Author(s):  
Max Anderson ◽  
Lisa Norton ◽  
Fiona Mathews

There was an error in the original article [...]


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. eabe4214
Author(s):  
Hae Jin Jeong ◽  
Hee Chang Kang ◽  
An Suk Lim ◽  
Se Hyeon Jang ◽  
Kitack Lee ◽  
...  

Microalgae fuel food webs and biogeochemical cycles of key elements in the ocean. What determines microalgal dominance in the ocean is a long-standing question. Red tide distribution data (spanning 1990 to 2019) show that mixotrophic dinoflagellates, capable of photosynthesis and predation together, were responsible for ~40% of the species forming red tides globally. Counterintuitively, the species with low or moderate growth rates but diverse prey including diatoms caused red tides globally. The ability of these dinoflagellates to trade off growth for prey diversity is another genetic factor critical to formation of red tides across diverse ocean conditions. This finding has profound implications for explaining the global dominance of particular microalgae, their key eco-evolutionary strategy, and prediction of harmful red tide outbreaks.


Author(s):  
Feng-Hsun Chang ◽  
Jinny Yang ◽  
Ariana Chih-Hsien Liu ◽  
Hsiao-Pei Lu ◽  
Gwo-Ching Gong ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
James Baxter‐Gilbert ◽  
F. B. Vincent Florens ◽  
Cláudia Baider ◽  
Yuvna Devi Perianen ◽  
Denzel Shane Citta ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Javier Sánchez‐Hernández ◽  
Anders G. Finstad ◽  
Jo Vegar Arnekleiv ◽  
Gaute Kjærstad ◽  
Per‐Arne Amundsen

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document