Journal article

Aquatic microbial community is partially functionally redundant: Insights from an in situ reciprocal transplant experiment

K Tandon, MT Wan, CC Yang, SH Yang, B Baatar, CY Chiu, JW Tsai, WC Liu, CS Ng, SL Tang

Science of the Total Environment | Published : 2021

Abstract

Microbial communities are considered to be functionally redundant, but few studies have tested this hypothesis empirically. In this study, we performed an in situ reciprocal transplant experiment on the surface and bottom waters of two lakes (Tsuei-Feng (T) and Yuan-Yang (Y)) with disparate trophic states and tracked changes in their microbial community composition and functions for 6 weeks using high-throughput sequencing and functional approaches. T lake's surface (Ts) and bottom (Tb) water active bacterial community (16S rRNA gene-transcript) was dominated by Actinobacteria, Bacteroidia, and Cyanobacteria, whereas Y lake's surface (Ys) and bottom (Yb) water had Gammaproteobacteria, Alphap..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Academia Sinica


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors thank Dr. Jiun-Yan Ding, Mr. Cheng-Yu Yang, Dr. Sonny T. M. Lee, Dr. Ching-Hung Tseng, and Dr. Carol Eunmi Lee for their assistance with sampling. K.T. acknowledges the Taiwan International Graduate Program (TIGP) for its fellowship. The authors also express their gratitude to the anonymous reviewers for their insightful comments and suggestions for improving the quality of the manuscript, and to Mr. Noah Last of Third Draft Editing for his English language editing. This study was supported by the Thematic Project at Academia Sinica (AS-103-TP-B15-3).