Richness and density jointly determine context dependence in bacterial interactions

preprint OA: closed
📄 Open PDF View at publisher

Abstract

Pairwise interactions are often used to predict features of complex microbial communities due to the challenge of measuring multi-species interactions in high dimensional contexts. This assumes that interactions are unaffected by community context. Here, we used synthetic bacterial communities to investigate that assumption by observing how interactions varied across contexts. Interactions were most often weakly negative and showed clear phylogenetic signal. Community richness and total density emerged as strong predictors of interaction strength and contributed to an attenuation of interactions as richness increased. Population level and per-capita measures of interactions both displayed such attenuation, suggesting factors beyond systematic changes in population size were involved; namely, changes to the interactions themselves. Nevertheless, pairwise interactions retained some predictive value across contexts, provided those contexts were not substantially diverged in richness. These results suggest that understanding the emergent properties of microbial interactions can improve our ability to predict features of microbial communities.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Citation neighborhood (no data yet)

We don't have any in-corpus citations linked to this paper yet. The paper's references may be in our DB but unresolved to ``paper_id`` (resolution happens at ingest when the cited DOI matches a row we already have). Run the cross-source citation reconcile pass to retry.

Source provenance

europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00