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Aquatic food webs in deep temperate lakes: Key species establish through their autecological versatility.

Authors :
Qu, Zhishuai
Forster, Dominik
Bruni, Estelle P.
Frantal, Daniela
Kammerlander, Barbara
Nachbaur, Laura
Pitsch, Gianna
Posch, Thomas
Pröschold, Thomas
Teubner, Katrin
Sonntag, Bettina
Stoeck, Thorsten
Source :
Molecular Ecology. Feb2021, Vol. 30 Issue 4, p1053-1071. 19p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Microbial planktonic communities are the basis of food webs in aquatic ecosystems since they contribute substantially to primary production and nutrient recycling. Network analyses of DNA metabarcoding data sets emerged as a powerful tool to untangle the complex ecological relationships among the key players in food webs. In this study, we evaluated co‐occurrence networks constructed from time‐series metabarcoding data sets (12 months, biweekly sampling) of protistan plankton communities in surface layers (epilimnion) and bottom waters (hypolimnion) of two temperate deep lakes, Lake Mondsee (Austria) and Lake Zurich (Switzerland). Lake Zurich plankton communities were less tightly connected, more fragmented and had a higher susceptibility to a species extinction scenario compared to Lake Mondsee communities. We interpret these results as a lower robustness of Lake Zurich protistan plankton to environmental stressors, especially stressors resulting from climate change. In all networks, the phylum Ciliophora contributed the highest number of nodes, among them several in key positions of the networks. Associations in ciliate‐specific subnetworks resembled autecological species‐specific traits that indicate adaptions to specific environmental conditions. We demonstrate the strength of co‐occurrence network analyses to deepen our understanding of plankton community dynamics in lakes and indicate biotic relationships, which resulted in new hypotheses that may guide future research in climate‐stressed ecosystems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09621083
Volume :
30
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular Ecology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148724167
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/mec.15776