We tested the habitat filtering hypothesis by measuring the phylogenetic structure in marine bacterial communities before and after experimentally induced stress. The habitat filtering hypothesis predicts that phylogenetic clustering (mean relatedness) should increase as the environment becomes suitable for only a subset of the original community. We show that community composition and phylogenetic structure were considerably changed with changes in salinity and dissolved organic carbon. Community composition showed no consistent patterns, while the phylogenetic relatedness between species consistently increased with treatment. We have no information about species interactions in our system, but the phylogenetic signal is strong enough to s...
Background Since the landmark Santa Rosalia paper by Hutchinson, niche theory addresses the determin...
Our understanding of how biodiversity influences ecosystem functioning is entering a new stage of it...
The taxa–area relationship (TAR) and the distance–decay relationship (DDR) both describe spatial tur...
Abstract The phylogenetic structure and community com-position were analysed in an existing data set...
Aim Assembly of protist communities is known to be driven mainly by environmental filtering, but th...
Understanding of community ecology is scale dependent. When the scale definition changes from subjec...
International audienceAlthough environmental filtering has been observed to influence the biodiversi...
Fire alters ecosystems by changing the composition and community structure of soil microbes. The phy...
We examined the relationship between species richness (S) and evenness (J) within a novel, community...
Intertidal microbial mats are comprised of distinctly colored millimeter-thick layers whose communit...
Soil bacteria typically coexist with close relatives generating widespread phylogenetic clustering. ...
Taxa co-occurring in communities often represent a non-random sample, in phenotypic or phylogenetic ...
[Aim] Phylogenetic clustering, the coexistence of evolutionarily related organisms, appears to be co...
Increasing evidence has emerged for non-random spatial distributions of microbes, but knowledge of t...
Communities vary across space and time. In addition, they may vary differently at different spatial ...
Background Since the landmark Santa Rosalia paper by Hutchinson, niche theory addresses the determin...
Our understanding of how biodiversity influences ecosystem functioning is entering a new stage of it...
The taxa–area relationship (TAR) and the distance–decay relationship (DDR) both describe spatial tur...
Abstract The phylogenetic structure and community com-position were analysed in an existing data set...
Aim Assembly of protist communities is known to be driven mainly by environmental filtering, but th...
Understanding of community ecology is scale dependent. When the scale definition changes from subjec...
International audienceAlthough environmental filtering has been observed to influence the biodiversi...
Fire alters ecosystems by changing the composition and community structure of soil microbes. The phy...
We examined the relationship between species richness (S) and evenness (J) within a novel, community...
Intertidal microbial mats are comprised of distinctly colored millimeter-thick layers whose communit...
Soil bacteria typically coexist with close relatives generating widespread phylogenetic clustering. ...
Taxa co-occurring in communities often represent a non-random sample, in phenotypic or phylogenetic ...
[Aim] Phylogenetic clustering, the coexistence of evolutionarily related organisms, appears to be co...
Increasing evidence has emerged for non-random spatial distributions of microbes, but knowledge of t...
Communities vary across space and time. In addition, they may vary differently at different spatial ...
Background Since the landmark Santa Rosalia paper by Hutchinson, niche theory addresses the determin...
Our understanding of how biodiversity influences ecosystem functioning is entering a new stage of it...
The taxa–area relationship (TAR) and the distance–decay relationship (DDR) both describe spatial tur...