Authors
Woo Jun Sul, Thomas A Oliver, Hugh W Ducklow, Linda A Amaral-Zettler, Mitchell L Sogin
Publication date
2013/2/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
110
Issue
6
Pages
2342-2347
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
The microbial cosmopolitan dispersion hypothesis often invoked to explain distribution patterns driven by high connectivity of oceanographic water masses and widespread dispersal ability has never been rigorously tested. By using a global marine bacterial dataset and iterative matrix randomization simulation, we show that marine bacteria exhibit a significantly greater dispersal limitation than predicted by our null model using the “everything is everywhere” tenet with no dispersal limitation scenario. Specifically, marine bacteria displayed bipolar distributions (i.e., species occurring exclusively at both poles and nowhere else) significantly less often than in the null model. Furthermore, we observed fewer taxa present in both hemispheres but more taxa present only in a single hemisphere than expected under the null model. Each of these trends diverged further from the null expectation as the compared habitats …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
WJ Sul, TA Oliver, HW Ducklow, LA Amaral-Zettler… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2013