High salinity gradients and intermediate spatial scales shaped similar biogeographical and co-occurrence patterns of microeukaryotes in a tropical freshwater-saltwater ecosystem

Environ Microbiol. 2021 Aug;23(8):4778-4796. doi: 10.1111/1462-2920.15668. Epub 2021 Aug 2.

Abstract

Microeukaryotes play key ecological roles in the microbial web of aquatic ecosystems. However, large knowledge gaps urgently need to be filled regarding the biogeography with associated shaping mechanisms and co-occurrence patterns of microeukaryotes under freshwater-saltwater gradients, especially true in tropical regions. Here, we investigated microeukaryotes of six mixed freshwater-saltwater regions in the Pearl River Estuary and surrounding coasts in southern China, with salinity ranging 0.1-32.0% and distances spanned up to 500 km, using molecular ecological methods. Results indicate that the biogeography of abundant and rare microeukaryotic communities was similar, both their co-occurrence patterns and biogeographical patterns were driven by deterministic and stochastic processes. The environmental factors with higher selective pressure than dispersal limitation meant that the role of deterministic process in structuring communities was more significant than that of stochastic process, and salinity played important role in structuring both microeukaryotic communities and networks. The abundant communities had stronger influence on entire microeukaryotic communities and seemed to be more sensitive to environmental changes than their rare counterparts, while rare ones had stronger interspecific relationships. Finally, the geographic scale and environmental gradients of study regions should firstly be clarified in future research on the ecological processes of microeukaryotes before conclusions are drawn.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • China
  • Ecosystem*
  • Estuaries
  • Rivers
  • Salinity*