A biophysical model of prokaryotic diversity in geothermal hot springs
Anna Klales, James Duncan, Elizabeth Janus Nett, and Suzanne Amador, Kane (Physics Department, Haverford College, Haverford PA)

TL;DR
This paper presents a biophysical model explaining the complex thermal distribution and diversity of photosynthetic bacteria in geothermal hot springs, accounting for observed ecological and population dynamics across temperature gradients.
Contribution
The study introduces a biophysical population dynamics model that explains bacterial diversity and thermal distribution patterns in hot spring ecosystems, supported by empirical data.
Findings
Distribution of optimal bacterial temperatures is universal across locations.
Population density depends functionally on temperature.
Model reproduces observed diversity and population dynamics.
Abstract
Recent field investigations of photosynthetic bacteria living in geothermal hot spring environments have revealed surprisingly complex ecosystems, with an unexpected level of genetic diversity. One case of particular interest involves the distribution along hot spring thermal gradients of genetically distinct bacterial strains that differ in their preferred temperatures for reproduction and photosynthesis. In such systems, a single variable, temperature, defines the relevant environmental variation. In spite of this, each region along the thermal gradient exhibits multiple strains of photosynthetic bacteria adapted to several distinct thermal optima, rather than the expected single thermal strain adapted to the local environmental temperature. Here we analyze microbiology data from several ecological studies to show that the thermal distribution field data exhibit several universal…
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