Our site is using cookies to record anonymous visitor statistics and enhance your user experience.   OK | Find out more

Natural Environment Research Council Home
Skip to content

New law discovered in a hole in a tree

23 June 2005

Logo: Centre for Ecology & Hydrology

Researchers have discovered a new universal biological law whilst looking in holes in trees near Oxford according to a paper published in the journal Science on 24 June 2005.

The scientists from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology and University of Oxford found that patterns of abundance and genetic diversity of microorganisms living in water-filled holes in trees were similar to patterns found in higher animal and plant communities.

The study looked at the relationship between number of species and size of the habitat - one of the oldest patterns in ecology is that the bigger the area the more the species. The scientists investigated if this relationship held true for the world of microorganisms and found, to their surprise, that it did.

Paper author Chris van der Gast from the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology said, "If microorganisms follow the same laws as plants and animals it will make our job a lot easier. Understanding these relationships has major medical, agriculture and pollution control applications".

Dr van der Gast went on to say that, "wastewater treatment plants could benefit from this work. At the moment the sludge tanks are a black box - we know the bacteria break down the waste but we don't really know exactly how it works. If we understand better how these organisms function we can engineer domestic and industrial sewage plants to be more efficient."

Scientists previously thought that biodiversity at the microbial level was fundamentally different than that for larger organisms, such as plants and mammals.

Dr van der Gast said, "The species-area relationship is used extensively in conservation studies to make decisions on how best to manage biodiversity. For plants and animals the law allows us to estimate population distributions, numbers of individuals and species diversity."

The team believe that if this law can be applied to the microbial world researchers can improve many key industrial processes that make use of microorganisms.

Dr van der Gast added, "Microbial communities are vitally important. For example, they help to promote plant growth and protect plants against disease, as well as cleaning up pollution. By knowing the laws that govern natural communities of microbes we can decide whether or not to intervene when pollution occurs."

Further information

Barnaby Smith
Centre for Ecology & Hydrology
Press office
Tel: 07832 160960

NERC Press Office
Natural Environment Research Council
Polaris House, North Star Avenue
Swindon, SN2 1EU
Tel: 01793 411561
Mob: 07917 557215


Notes

1. The paper, 'Larger Islands House More Bacterial Taxa' will be published in Science on 24 June 2005. A pdf of the paper is available on request.

2. Dr van der Gast is based at the Centre for Ecology & Hydrology, Oxford.

3. The Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (CEH) is the UK's leading research organisation for land and freshwater science. Its 500 scientists carry out research to improve our understanding of both the environment and the processes that underlie the Earth's support systems. It is one of the Natural Environment Research Council's research centres. CEH has 8 research sites within England, Scotland and Wales and an administrative headquarters based at Swindon.

4. NERC is one of the UK's research councils. It uses a budget of about £350m a year to fund and carry out impartial scientific research in the sciences of the environment. NERC trains the next generation of independent environmental scientists. It is addressing some of the key questions facing mankind such as global warming, renewable energy and sustainable economic development.

Press release: 30/05

External links

 

Press links

 

Recent press news