Abstract
Evolution occurring over ecological time scales can affect community
functions both directly and indirectly, via changes in community
composition. This interplay between ecology and evolution makes
identifying the role of rapid evolution in shaping the functioning of
complex natural communities challenging. We used a methanogenic
community from an anaerobic digester to investigate the potential
importance of rapid evolution in shaping community methane production.
To disentangle evolutionary and ecological processes, we pre-adapted the
community to a novel feedstock in laboratory anaerobic fermenters for 6
weeks and then inoculated 1% back into the ancestral community. This
allowed the introduction of any within-taxa genetic changes that
occurred over the pre-adaptation period, while minimally altering the
taxonomic composition of the community. The addition of the pre-adapted
inoculum increased biogas production by ~10% over 6
weeks compared to a control treatment without the addition, with the
corresponding minor changes in community composition unable to explain
this increase. These findings suggest that rapid adaptive evolution can
play an important role in shaping the structure and function of natural
microbial communities and provide a novel approach to enhancing
microbial community functions.