Microbial metacommunity of salt marshes rebuilds along an elevational gradient after initial disturbance
Dennis Alexander Tebbe, Joanne Yong, Mike Smykala, Lucie Kuczynski, Manuel Lanza Guedán, Kertu Lõhmus, Daniela Pieck, Anja Poehlein, Hendrik Schäfer, Martin Könneke, Stefanie D. Moorthi, Bert Engelen

TL;DR
This study shows how microbial communities in salt marshes rebuild after disturbance, following elevation patterns similar to natural zones.
Contribution
The study reveals how microbial metacommunities recover along elevation gradients and identifies keystone species involved in the process.
Findings
Microbial metacommunities re-assembled along elevation gradients after disturbance.
Woeseiaceae, Flavobacteriaceae, and Rhodobacteraceae were identified as keystone species.
Habitat filtering was the primary driver of community assembly.
Abstract
Salt marshes are ecologically important ecosystems with dynamic nutrient exchange between land and sea. Their zonation along an elevation gradient supports specific communities exhibiting successional patterns. Previous studies have mainly focused on individual domains, with limited attempts to explore interdependencies of community assemblies across domains. Here, we investigated the co-occurrence of prokaryotes and microeukaryotes in natural salt marsh sediments and experimental islands placed in the adjacent tidal flat. The islands contained originally bare and transplanted plots at three different elevations, corresponding to the typical salt marsh zonation. After initial disturbance by the artificial setting, microbial metacommunities re-assembled along the elevation gradient, showing distinct community compositions comparable to those of the natural salt marsh zones. Interkingdom…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrobial Community Ecology and Physiology · Coastal wetland ecosystem dynamics · Gut microbiota and health
