Meet the Microbiologist

072: Microbial diversity of natural ecosystems with Jennifer Martiny


Listen Later

Jennifer Martiny describes the incredible microbial biodiversity of natural ecosystems such as soils and waterways. She explains how to add a bit of control in experiments with so many variables, and why categorizing microbial types is important for quantifying patterns.

Host: Julie Wolf

Subscribe (free) on iPhone, Android, RSS, or by email. You can also listen on your mobile device with the ASM Podcast app.

Julie's biggest takeaways:

  • Studying microbial community functions in their natural environment are harder to understand, but help us to parse the complexity of the natural world, in part because these experiments also include local flora and fauna that are often omitted in the controlled lab environment. Microbial cages - an actual physical barrier that contains a soil-based community - can help to disentangle the effects of the microbial community from those of the surrounding environment by adding a level of control by limiting interaction of microbes inside the nylon mesh cage with those outside of it.

  • Are microbial functions redundant? It depends on what function you look at - respiration is a very common function, so it’s less likely to be affected by a change in microbiome composition. Other functions, such as degrading particular compounds, may have a stronger relationship between the microbes present and those functions.

  • Microbes are hugely diverse! Jennifer’s comparison of all the diversity of the birds on Earth to a single bacterial taxon is mind-blowing!

  • Microbial categorization may be hard, but the ability to group similar organisms is necessary to formulate hypotheses and conduct experiments. It’s important to remember the groupings are manmade and sometimes have to be reconstructed!

 

Featured Quotes (in order of appearance)

“One of the hardest things we study is not on the microbiology side but is on the ecosystem side, measuring those biochemical functions in the environment.” (10:05)

“It’s not as if we are ever going to be able to study every particular organism out there and build a model with thousands of equations; instead what we really need to do is go after trade-offs and overall relationships that may hold across large groups, and in that way have some simple rules under different conditions like drought or temperature.” (16:45)

"Modern birds evolved about 100, 125 million years ago. Two sequences that share the 16S gene, if it’s roughly 97% identical, probably diverged 150 million years ago. That means we are lumping in all the diversity within the bacteria group within one taxon, calling it a species, which is the equivalent of lumping all birds together!" (18:47)

“It’s a bit overwhelming to imagine that for each 16S rRNA taxon, you could have as much functional, morphological, and behavioral diversity as what we see in all of birds!” (19:39)

“In biology, we’re always using an operational definition but we don’t want to get too hung up on the definition and miss all the interesting patterns going on!” (20:49)

“If you can start to quantify patterns, then you can start to ask ecological and even evolutionary questions about why we see those patterns.” (33:04)  

Links for this episode

  • Jennifer Martiny Lab Home Page

  • University of California Irvine Microbiome Initiative

  • HOM Tidbit: TWIM 50: These things aren’t even bacteria!

  • Carl Woese Obituary (New York Times)

  • Carl Woese 1996 Feature (New York Times)

Send your stories about our guests and/or your comments to [email protected].

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Meet the MicrobiologistBy Ashley Hagen, M.S.

  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7
  • 4.7

4.7

35 ratings


More shows like Meet the Microbiologist

View all
Nature Podcast by Springer Nature Limited

Nature Podcast

763 Listeners

Science Magazine Podcast by Science Magazine

Science Magazine Podcast

809 Listeners

MicrobeWorld Video by American Society for Microbiology

MicrobeWorld Video

28 Listeners

Global News Podcast by BBC World Service

Global News Podcast

7,817 Listeners

This Week in Virology by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Virology

2,054 Listeners

Microbios by Max Brito

Microbios

12 Listeners

StarTalk Radio by Neil deGrasse Tyson

StarTalk Radio

14,007 Listeners

This Week in Parasitism by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Parasitism

455 Listeners

BacterioFiles by Jesse Noar

BacterioFiles

20 Listeners

MicrobeWorld Video HD by American Society for Microbiology

MicrobeWorld Video HD

4 Listeners

MicrobeWorld Video (audio only) by American Society for Microbiology

MicrobeWorld Video (audio only)

4 Listeners

99% Invisible by Roman Mars

99% Invisible

26,182 Listeners

This Week in Microbiology by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Microbiology

507 Listeners

Editors in Conversation by American Society for Microbiology

Editors in Conversation

24 Listeners

Science Vs by Spotify Studios

Science Vs

11,890 Listeners

This Week in Virology by Vincent Racaniello

This Week in Virology

225 Listeners

Immune by Vincent Racaniello

Immune

269 Listeners

People I (Mostly) Admire by Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

People I (Mostly) Admire

2,090 Listeners

Febrile by Sara Dong

Febrile

172 Listeners

The Ezra Klein Show by New York Times Opinion

The Ezra Klein Show

15,195 Listeners

Infectious Disease Puscast by Vincent Racaniello

Infectious Disease Puscast

80 Listeners