WHAT ARE BACTERIAL SPECIES?
Bacterial systematics has not yet reached a consensus for defining the fundamental unit of biological diversity, the species. The past half-century of bacterial systematics has been characterized by improvements in methods for demarcating species as phenotypic and genetic clusters, but species demar...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Annual review of microbiology 2002-01, Vol.56 (1), p.457-487 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Bacterial systematics has not yet reached a consensus for defining the
fundamental unit of biological diversity, the species. The past half-century of
bacterial systematics has been characterized by improvements in methods for
demarcating species as phenotypic and genetic clusters, but species demarcation
has not been guided by a theory-based concept of species. Eukaryote
systematists have developed a universal concept of species: A species is a
group of organisms whose divergence is capped by a force of cohesion;
divergence between different species is irreversible; and different species are
ecologically distinct. In the case of bacteria, these universal properties are
held not by the named species of systematics but by ecotypes. These are
populations of organisms occupying the same ecological niche, whose divergence
is purged recurrently by natural selection. These ecotypes can be discovered by
several universal sequence-based approaches. These molecular methods suggest
that a typical named species contains many ecotypes, each with the universal
attributes of species. A named bacterial species is thus more like a genus than
a species. |
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ISSN: | 0066-4227 1545-3251 |
DOI: | 10.1146/annurev.micro.56.012302.160634 |