Abstract

Microbial communities often exhibit incredible taxonomic diversity, raising questions regarding the mechanisms enabling species coexistence and the role of this diversity in community functioning. On the one hand, many coexisting but taxonomically distinct microorganisms can encode the same energy-yielding metabolic functions, and this functional redundancy contrasts with the expectation that species should occupy distinct metabolic niches. On the other hand, the identity of taxa encoding each function can vary substantially across space or time with little effect on the function, and this taxonomic variability is frequently thought to result from ecological drift between equivalent organisms. Here, we synthesize the powerful paradigm emerging from these two patterns, connecting the roles of function, functional redundancy and taxonomy in microbial systems. We conclude that both patterns are unlikely to be the result of ecological drift, but are inevitable emergent properties of open microbial systems resulting mainly from biotic interactions and environmental and spatial processes.

Keywords

Redundancy (engineering)BiologyEcological nicheEcologyNicheENCODEFunction (biology)TaxonFunctional diversityEvolutionary biologyComputer scienceGeneticsHabitat

MeSH Terms

ArchaeaBacteriaBacterial Physiological PhenomenaFungiMicrobiota

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Publication Info

Year
2018
Type
review
Volume
2
Issue
6
Pages
936-943
Citations
1707
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1707
OpenAlex
25
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Cite This

Stilianos Louca, Martin F. Polz, Florent Mazel et al. (2018). Function and functional redundancy in microbial systems. Nature Ecology & Evolution , 2 (6) , 936-943. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41559-018-0519-1

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/s41559-018-0519-1
PMID
29662222

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%