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Disturbance regime changes leave long-lasting legacies on a microbial community's composition and function

Created on 13 Jun 2026

Authors

Inamine, H., Lear, L., Miller, A., Roxburgh, S., Buckling, A., Shea, K.

Abstract

Mortality-inducing disturbances are important, ubiquitous drivers of community composition and function. Importantly, human activities and climate change are increasingly altering disturbance regimes. Most disturbance studies focus on the effects of current disturbance regimes, rarely considering those of historical regimes. However, recent theoretical work predicts that historical regimes can leave persistent legacies, modulating the community's response to novel disturbances and invasive species. Here, we complement this theoretical approach using a model bacterial system that experienced disturbance regimes for ~120 generations, followed by novel regimes and invasions for another ~120 generations. Our results show persistent effects of historical legacies on disturbance-diversity relationships. Furthermore, some combinations of past and novel regimes promote invasion with increasing resident diversity, while others prevent it; legacies may explain conflicting diversity-invasibility relationships. These findings demonstrate the importance of historical legacies in disturbance-prone ecosystems, and underscore the challenges in predicting future community responses to disturbance regime changes.

Preprint server: bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 13 Jun 2026.

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