Nonequilibrium microbial dynamics unveil a new macroecological pattern beyond Taylor's law

We introduce a comprehensive analytical benchmark, relying on Fokker-Planck formalism, to study microbial dynamics in the presence of both biotic and abiotic forces. In equilibrium, we observe a balance between the two kinds of forces, leading to no correlations between species abundances. This impl...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review. E 2024-10, Vol.110 (4-1), p.044402, Article 044402
Hauptverfasser: Camacho-Mateu, José, Lampo, Aniello, Ares, Saúl, Cuesta, José A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We introduce a comprehensive analytical benchmark, relying on Fokker-Planck formalism, to study microbial dynamics in the presence of both biotic and abiotic forces. In equilibrium, we observe a balance between the two kinds of forces, leading to no correlations between species abundances. This implies that real microbiomes, where correlations have been observed, operate out of equilibrium. Therefore, we analyze nonequilibrium dynamics, presenting an ansatz for an approximate solution that embodies the complex interplay of forces in the system. This solution is consistent with Taylor's law as a coarse-grained approximation of the relation between species abundance and variance, but implies subtler effects, predicting unobserved structure beyond Taylor's law. Motivated by this theoretical prediction, we refine the analysis of existing metagenomic data, unveiling a novel universal macroecological pattern. Finally, we speculate on the physical origin of Taylor's law: building upon an analogy with Brownian motion theory, we propose that Taylor's law emerges as a fluctuation-growth relation resulting from equipartition of environmental resources among microbial species.
ISSN:2470-0045
2470-0053
2470-0053
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevE.110.044402