Authors
Martin F Polz, Dana E Hunt, Sarah P Preheim, Daniel M Weinreich
Publication date
2006/11/29
Source
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Volume
361
Issue
1475
Pages
2009-2021
Publisher
The Royal Society
Description
Microbes in the ocean dominate biogeochemical processes and are far more diverse than anticipated. Thus, in order to understand the ocean system, we need to delineate microbial populations with predictable ecological functions. Recent observations suggest that ocean communities comprise diverse groups of bacteria organized into genotypic (and phenotypic) clusters of closely related organisms. Although such patterns are similar to metazoan communities, the underlying mechanisms for microbial communities may differ substantially. Indeed, the potential among ocean microbes for vast population sizes, extensive migration and both homologous and illegitimate genetic recombinations, which are uncoupled from reproduction, challenges classical population models primarily developed for sexually reproducing animals. We examine possible mechanisms leading to the formation of genotypic clusters and …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MF Polz, DE Hunt, SP Preheim, DM Weinreich - Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B …, 2006