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Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008      Identifying the fundamental units of bacterial diversity: A paradigm shift to incorporate ecology into bacterial systematics
Alexander Koeppel, Elizabeth B. Perry, Johannes Sikorski, Danny Krizanc, Andrew Warner, David M. Ward, Alejandro P. Rooney, Evelyne Brambilla, Nora Connor, Rodney M. Ratcliff, Eviatar Nevo and Frederick M. Cohan
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
Abstract

The central questions of bacterial ecology and evolution require a method to consistently demarcate, from the vast and diverse set of bacterial cells within a natural community, the groups playing ecologically distinct roles (ecotypes). Because of a lack of theorybased guidelines, current methods in bacterial systematics fail to divide the bacterial domain of life into meaningful units of ecology and evolution.Weintroduce a sequence-based approach ("ecotype simulation") to model the evolutionary dynamics of bacterial populations and to identify ecotypes within a natural community, focusing here on two Bacillus clades surveyed from the "Evolution Canyons" of Israel. This approach has identified multiple ecotypes within traditional species, with each predicted to be an ecologically distinct lineage; many such ecotypes were confirmed to be ecologically distinct, with specialization to different canyon slopes with different solar exposures. Ecotype simulation provides a longneeded natural foundation for microbial ecology and systematics.

Keywords: Bacillus, Evolution Canyon, ecotype, periodic selection, species concept

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