Response to environmental perturbations in microbial nutrient-cycling ecosystems
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Abstract
The habitability of Earth is dependent upon the global recycling of elements
essential for life, such as nitrogen, sulfur and carbon. Nutrient-cycling by micro-organisms
is vital to these biogeochemical cycles because many key steps are
mediated primarily, or exclusively, by microbial life. The dynamics of these cycles
are highly complex, and environmental perturbations (such as changes in the
oceanic oxygen concentration) can have unexpected or catastrophic effects; often
causing abrupt switches between chemical states. Despite the importance of these
environmental perturbations however, few theoretical models have addressed how
they affect the dynamical behaviour of nutrient-cycling microbial ecosystems.
In this work, we investigate the effect of environmental perturbations on
microbially-mediated nutrient cycles and assess the likelihood of "sudden transitions"
between chemical states of the ecosystem occurring in a variety of ecological
contexts. To do this, we first use computational modelling of microbial nutrient-cycling,
using a "box model" approach. We then move on to an experimental
study using the microbial sulfur cycle as a model ecosystem, with freshwater
pond sediment/water microcosms. These microcosms have the advantage
of retaining many of the features of the real ecosystem (such as microbial
diversity, spatial structure, and abiotic interactions) while allowing the controlled
manipulation of environmental perturbations. We study these microcosms using
a combination of chemical measurements and high-throughput sequencing of
the microbial community. Finally, we return to the computational side, and
attempt to reproduce chemical data from our experiments in a mathematical
model containing realistic abiotic chemical interactions.
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