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      Dynamic trophic shifts in bacterial and eukaryotic communities during the first 30 years of microbial succession following retreat of an Antarctic glacier.

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          Abstract

          We examined microbial succession along a glacier forefront in the Antarctic Peninsula representing ∼30 years of deglaciation to contrast bacterial and eukaryotic successional dynamics and abiotic drivers of community assembly using sequencing and soil properties. Microbial communities changed most rapidly early along the chronosequence, and co-occurrence network analysis showed the most complex topology at the earliest stage. Initial microbial communities were dominated by microorganisms derived from the glacial environment, whereas later stages hosted a mixed community of taxa associated with soils. Eukaryotes became increasingly dominated by Cercozoa, particularly Vampyrellidae, indicating a previously unappreciated role for cercozoan predators during early stages of primary succession. Chlorophytes and Charophytes (rather than cyanobacteria) were the dominant primary producers and there was a spatio-temporal sequence in which major groups became abundant succeeding from simple ice Chlorophytes to Ochrophytes and Bryophytes. Time since deglaciation and pH were the main abiotic drivers structuring both bacterial and eukaryotic communities. Determinism was the dominant assembly mechanism for Bacteria, while the balance between stochastic/deterministic processes in eukaryotes varied along the distance from the glacier front. This study provides new insights into the unexpected dynamic changes and interactions across multiple trophic groups during primary succession in a rapidly changing polar ecosystem.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          FEMS Microbiol Ecol
          FEMS microbiology ecology
          Oxford University Press (OUP)
          1574-6941
          0168-6496
          Nov 22 2022
          : 98
          : 12
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado at Boulder, UCB 334, 1900 Pleasant St, Boulder, CO 80309, United States.
          [2 ] DOE Joint Genome Institute Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory 1 Cyclotron Road, Berkeley, CA 94720, United States.
          [3 ] Department of Geological and Atmospheric Sciences 253 Science Hall 2237 Osborn Drive Ames, Iowa 50011-3212, United States.
          [4 ] Integrative Oceanography Division Scripps Institution of Oceanography 9500 Gilman Drive La Jolla, CA 92093 5, United States.
          [5 ] Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory P.O. Box 1000 61 Route 9W Palisades, NY 10964-1000, United States.
          Article
          6762214
          10.1093/femsec/fiac122
          36251461
          02a21db3-236f-4d40-9f71-122c83e9f020
          History

          Cercozoa,network analysis,microbial succession,glacier chronosequence,eukaryotic primary producers,community-assembly mechanisms,Antarctic Peninsula

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