Ubiquitous microbes and ecosystem function

Authors: Finlay, B.J. and Esteban, G.F.

Journal: Limnetica

Volume: 20

Issue: 1

Pages: 31-43

eISSN: 1989-1806

ISSN: 0213-8409

Abstract:

Until recently, microbial diversity was the least well understood component of biodiversity. But free-living microbes have some unique characteristics, and it is now believed that these may simplify the task of understanding biodiversity at the microbial level. Microbes have astronomical abundance on a global scale. As a consequence, species are ubiquitous, so speciation and extinction are rare, the global number of microbial species is relatively small, and local species richness is a large proportion of global species richness. At some critical point on the continuum of increasing organism size, local:global species richness ratios will begin to decrease and the proportion of the world's taxa represented at a single site will begin to fall. The organism size range marking this 'ubiquity-biogeography' (U-B) transition is unknown but is unlikely to extend below I mm. As "everything (microbial) is everywhere", ecosystem functions will rarely, if ever, be limited by lack of microbial diversity. © Asociacion Española dc Limnología.

Source: Scopus

Ubiquitous microbes and ecosystem function

Authors: Finlay, B.J. and Esteban, G.F.

Journal: Limnetica

Volume: 20

Pages: 31-43

ISSN: 0213-8409

Source: Manual