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Microorganisms have the potential to affect plant seed germination and seedling fitness, ultimately impacting plant health and community dynamics. Because seed-associated microbiota are highly variable across individual plants, plant species, and environments, it is challenging to identify the dominant processes that underlie the assembly, composition, and influence of these communities. We propose here that metacommunity ecology provides a conceptually useful framework for studying the microbiota of developing seeds, by the application of metacommunity principles of filtering, species interactions, and dispersal at multiple scales. Many studies in seed microbial ecology already describe individual assembly processes in a pattern-based manner, such as correlating seed microbiome composition with genotype or tracking diversity metrics across treatments in dispersal limitation experiments. But we see a lot of opportunities to examine understudied aspects of seed microbiology, including trait-based research on mechanisms of filtering and dispersal at the micro-scale, the use of pollination exclusion experiments in macro-scale seed studies, and an in-depth evaluation of how these processes interact priority effect experiments and joint species distribution modeling.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2022.877519 | DOI Listing |
PNAS Nexus
September 2025
School of Aquatic and Fishery Sciences, University of Washington, 1122 NE Boat St, Box 355020, Seattle, WA 98105, USA.
Animal populations often display coherent temporal fluctuations in their abundance, with far-ranging implications for species persistence and ecosystem stability. The key mechanisms driving spatial population synchrony include organismal dispersal, spatially correlated environmental dynamics (Moran effect) and concordant consumer-resource dynamics. Disentangling these mechanisms, however, is notoriously difficult in natural systems, and the extent to which the biotic environment (intensity and types of biotic interactions) mediates metapopulation dynamics remains a largely unanswered question.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFmSphere
August 2025
Organismal and Evolutionary Biology Research Program, Faculty of Biological and Environmental Sciences, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
Unlabelled: Anthropogenic activities induce drastic changes in land use that are at least partly responsible for the ongoing global patterns of macro-biodiversity erosion. These habitat changes also impact the fitness of the resilient species, through direct effects on diet and/or indirect environmental effects. Although microbial communities associated with species can crucially influence a diverse set of their host's biological functions, studies on how microbial communities associated with wild species respond to habitat degradation remain scarce.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConserv Biol
August 2025
School of Ecology and Environment, Anhui Normal University, Wuhu, China.
How species interact with habitat patches is influenced primarily by habitat configuration (e.g., connectivity) and species' functional traits.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFR Soc Open Sci
July 2025
Department of Ecoscience, Aarhus Universitet, Aarhus C. 8000, Denmark.
Inferring assembly processes from species co-occurrence data is a long-standing challenge in community ecology. Approaches that focus on detecting non-random spatial covariance between species occurrences are limited by the fact that spatial patterns can deviate from randomness for many reasons. Process-based null hypotheses are needed to overcome this limitation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME Commun
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of Marine Environmental Science / National Observation and Research Station for the Taiwan Strait Marine Ecosystem (T-SMART) / Fujian Provincial Key Laboratory for Coastal Ecology and Environmental Studies / College of the Environment and Ecology, Xiamen University, Xiamen, Fuji
Understanding the diversity-productivity relationship (DPR) is crucial for elucidating the ecological functions of marine bacterioplankton. However, studies have often focused on species diversity, neglecting phylogenetic diversity, which may offer deeper insights into the complex ecological processes shaping DPR in natural systems. This study addressed this gap by exploring the role of phylogenetic diversity in bacterioplankton productivity in the northern South China Sea, a coastal ecosystem influenced by estuarine plumes.
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