Estimating prokaryotic diversity and its limits
- *Department of Civil Engineering, †Centre for Molecular Ecology, and ¶Neural Systems Group, Department of Psychology, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, United Kingdom; and §Department of Civil Engineering, University of Glasgow, Glasgow GL12 8LT, United Kingdom
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Edited by Robert May, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom, and approved May 22, 2002 (received for review December 18, 2001)
Abstract
The absolute diversity of prokaryotes is widely held to be unknown and unknowable at any scale in any environment. However, it is not necessary to count every species in a community to estimate the number of different taxa therein. It is sufficient to estimate the area under the species abundance curve for that environment. Log-normal species abundance curves are thought to characterize communities, such as bacteria, which exhibit highly dynamic and random growth. Thus, we are able to show that the diversity of prokaryotic communities may be related to the ratio of two measurable variables: the total number of individuals in the community and the abundance of the most abundant members of that community. We assume that either the least abundant species has an abundance of 1 or Preston's canonical hypothesis is valid. Consequently, we can estimate the bacterial diversity on a small scale (oceans 160 per ml; soil 6,400–38,000 per g; sewage works 70 per ml). We are also able to speculate about diversity at a larger scale, thus the entire bacterial diversity of the sea may be unlikely to exceed 2 × 106, while a ton of soil could contain 4 × 106 different taxa. These are preliminary estimates that may change as we gain a greater understanding of the nature of prokaryotic species abundance curves. Nevertheless, it is evident that local and global prokaryotic diversity can be understood through species abundance curves and purely experimental approaches to solving this conundrum will be fruitless.
Footnotes
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↵ ‡ To whom reprint requests should be addressed. E-mail: tom.curtis{at}ncl.ac.uk.
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This paper was submitted directly (Track II) to the PNAS office.
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See commentary on page 10234.
- Abbreviations:
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FISH, fluorescent in situ hybridization
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AOB, ammonia oxidizing bacteria
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- Copyright © 2002, The National Academy of Sciences





