RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 “Neutral and niche dynamics in a synthetic microbial community” JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 107896 DO 10.1101/107896 A1 NJ Cira A1 MT Pearce A1 SR Quake YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/02/12/107896.abstract AB Ecologists debate the relative importance of niche versus neutral processes in understanding biodiversity1,2. This debate is especially pertinent to microbial communities, which play crucial roles in biogeochemical cycling3,4, food production5, industrial processes6,7, and human health and disease8. Here we created a synthetic microbial community using heritable genetic barcodes and tracked community composition over time across a range of experimental conditions. We show that a transition exists between the neutral and niche regimes, and, consistent with theory, the crossover point depends on factors including immigration, fitness, and population size. We find that diversity declined most rapidly at intermediate population sizes, which can be explained by a tradeoff between replacement by migration and duration of growth. We then ran an experiment where the community underwent abrupt or gradual changes in size, the outcome of which highlights that selecting the correct model is essential to managing diversity. Taken together these results emphasize the importance of including niche effects to obtain realistic models across a wide range of parameters, even in simple systems.