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Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, December 2002, p. 592-616, Vol. 66, No. 4
1092-2172/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.66.4.592-616.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Microbial Biodiversity: Approaches to Experimental Design and Hypothesis Testing in Primary Scientific Literature from 1975 to 1999
Cindy E. Morris,1* Marc Bardin,1 Odile Berge,2 Pascale Frey-Klett,3 Nathalie Fromin,4 Hélène Girardin,5 Marie-Hélène Guinebretière,5 Philippe Lebaron,6 Jean M. Thiéry,7 and Marc Troussellier8
Station de Pathologie Végétale,1
Station de Technologie de Produits Végétaux, INRA, Avignon,5
CEA Cadarache, DSV DEVM LEMIR, UMR 163 CNRS-CEA, Univ-mediterranee, St Paul-Lez-Durance,2
UMR INRA-UHP Interactions Arbres-Microorganismes, Centre INRA de Nancy, Nancy,3
University of Paris VI, UMR 7621 CNRS, Laboratoire ARAGO, Banyuls-sur-mere,6
ModLibre.org, Eguilles,7
Laboratoire Ecosystèmes Lagunaires, UMR 5119 CNRS-Université Montpellier II, Montpellier, France,8
Laboratoire de Microbiologie, University of NeuchÂtel, NeuchÂtel, Switzerland4

SUMMARY
Research interest in microbial biodiversity over the past 25
years has increased markedly as microbiologists have become
interested in the significance of biodiversity for ecological
processes and as the industrial, medical, and agricultural applications
of this diversity have evolved. One major challenge for studies
of microbial habitats is how to account for the diversity of
extremely large and heterogeneous populations with samples that
represent only a very small fraction of these populations. This
review presents an analysis of the way in which the field of
microbial biodiversity has exploited sampling, experimental
design, and the process of hypothesis testing to meet this challenge.
This review is based on a systematic analysis of 753 publications
randomly sampled from the primary scientific literature from
1975 to 1999 concerning the microbial biodiversity of eight
habitats related to water, soil, plants, and food. These publications
illustrate a dominant and growing interest in questions concerning
the effect of specific environmental factors on microbial biodiversity,
the spatial and temporal heterogeneity of this biodiversity,
and quantitative measures of population structure for most of
the habitats covered here. Nevertheless, our analysis reveals
that descriptions of sampling strategies or other information
concerning the representativeness of the sample are often missing
from publications, that there is very limited use of statistical
tests of hypotheses, and that only a very few publications report
the results of multiple independent tests of hypotheses. Examples
are cited of different approaches and constraints to experimental
design and hypothesis testing in studies of microbial biodiversity.
To prompt a more rigorous approach to unambiguous evaluation
of the impact of microbial biodiversity on ecological processes,
we present guidelines for reporting information about experimental
design, sampling strategies, and analyses of results in publications
concerning microbial biodiversity.

INTRODUCTION
In the mid-1900s, the provocative publications of R. H. MacArthur
and G. E. Hutchinson (
115,
165,
166) spurred the field of ecology
into intense research and debate about the significance of biodiversity.
These and other workers claimed that biodiversity is a measure
of important ecological processes such as resource partitioning,
competition, succession, and community productivity and is also
an indicator of community stability. The bulk of this new wave
of biodiversity research concerned plant and animal communities.
In the 1960s, following in the footsteps of plant and animal
ecologists, microbiologists began investigating the impact of
biodiversity on the function and structure of microbial communities
(
97,
257). These questions served to intensify interest in biodiversity,
a concept that has been a longstanding foundation of microbiology.
Genetic variation among individuals within a population has
long been recognized as the starting block for adaptation and
evolution among microorganisms as well as among other organisms.
Likewise, the consequences of phenotypic variability for the
accuracy of disease diagnosis and for establishing taxonomic
relationships among microorganisms have been well studied. Following
the new research wave of the 1960s, interest in microbial biodiversity
has been further bolstered by (i) creation of the Diversitas
international research program in 1991 to promote scientific
investigations into the origins and conservation of biodiversity
and the impact of biodiversity on ecological functions, (ii)
the Biodiversity Treaty that issued from the United Nations
Conference on Environment and Development in 1992 in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, and (iii) subsequent initiatives launched by
science foundations, scientific societies, and research institutions
in a wide range of countries. Microbial biodiversity has also
received particular attention in areas where industrial applications
are evidentsuch as for marine, medical, and food biotechnologyand
where microbial activity has important implications for Earth's
climate and for the bioremediation of polluted sites (
46). Nevertheless,
in spite of the research devoted to microbial biodiversity and
to biodiversity in general, the consequences of biodiversity
on the ecological processes cited above are still the object
of debate and analysis (
263,
264,
290).
If one takes a superficial glance at the study of biodiversity, it seems to be largely a descriptive endeavor: trap, identify, and count. However, as suggested above, the motivation behind these studies arises from specific hypotheses about the nature of biodiversity and its impact on ecological processes. In some studies, the hypotheses are explicit. For example, Hariston et al. (97) sought to test the hypothesis that increasing biodiversity is positively correlated with increasing community stability. Likewise, Kaneko and Atlas (130) focused on the hypothesis that biodiversity is correlated with the density of populations of bacteria in ice, sediment, and water from the Beaufort Sea. In other studies, the hypotheses are implicit, such as for a census of species or groups in a community or for studies of techniques for characterizing biodiversity. The hypotheses in these cases concern the accuracy of the census, the efficiency and biases of the techniques, and, above all, the notion that the observations made are not artifacts.
Tests of such hypotheses are based on demonstrating that one's observations are not due to random error or to factors other than those evoked in the hypothesis. In general, this involves three precautions: (i) experimental design and sampling procedures to reduce the influence of unwanted factors on the resulting observations, (ii) statistical tests to eliminate biases in the judgment of the observer, and (iii) multiple independent tests of a hypothesis to reduce the possibility that random error is the cause of the results observed. The process of hypothesis testing presents some important challenges for the field of microbial biodiversity. The foremost of these is the problem of constituting a sample. How can samples account for the diversity of extremely large and heterogeneous microbial populations when they represent only a very small fraction of these populations or when the methods used have very low resolution? Ecologists studying the diversity of macroscopic organisms have produced a large body of literature devoted to sampling strategies (45, 102, 167, 168, 210). This literature testifies to the important impact that intrinsic properties of a population, such as spatial aggregation, rates of immigration, birth, and death, and the relative frequency of rare species, have on the extent to which the sample represents the population. Unfortunately, microbial ecologists rarely have a priori knowledge about these properties of the populations they study. Furthermore, the work reviewed by Swift (257) concerning the biodiversity of fungi during successional sequences in communities of decomposers provides an early illustration of the wide range of sources of variability that can be encountered on small scales in microbial biodiversity studies. Hence, the initial steps of designing studies of microbial diversity could require considerable reflection and preliminary investigations. A second obvious challenge that one could expect for microbial biodiversity studies resides in multiple, independent tests of hypotheses. This is a challenge because the complexity of identifying microorganisms, and bacteria in particular, can lead to considerable investment in time and labor. As a consequence, the number of strains or samples that can be analyzed is sometimes below the minimal number needed for a single unambiguous test of the hypothesis, and additional tests may be prohibitive.
The field of microbial biodiversity has grown markedly since the Diversitas initiative in 1991 and has resulted in a large body of scientific literature. Through this literature, we have witnessed the development of techniques for characterizing diversity, in particular at the molecular level for both culturable and nonculturable microorganisms (223, 262). Furthermore, this literature has also contributed to a general consensus that the microbial world is much more diverse than we can appreciate at present. However, the abundance of literature published in the field of microbial diversity does not seem proportional to our understanding of the significance of biodiversity for ecological processes in the microbial world or of the ways in which we can manipulate or manage this diversity. The authors of this review wondered about a potential cause of this context. What types of questionsor hypothesesare being addressed in the field of microbial biodiversity, and how have these hypotheses been tested? Our objective is to elucidate the cause of this context in practical terms: how has the field of microbial biodiversity employed sampling, experimental design, and, ultimately, the process of testing hypotheses over the past 25 years?
To review the approaches used for sampling, experimental design, and hypothesis testing in studies of microbial biodiversity we have, as a first step, traced the growth of research interest in this field for the past 25 years for a wide array of habitats including aquatic systems, soil and rhizosphere systems, mycorrhizae, the phyllosphere, food products, and food-processing factories. These habitats represent the fields of competence of the authors. We established a database of over 2,000 relevant publications and systematically characterized a randomly sampled subset as described in the first part of this review. The second part of the review is dedicated to illustrating the trends in the themes of research concerning the biodiversity of these habitats. This part of the analysis allowed us to identify eight principal themes that have been the main focus of microbial biodiversity studies over the past 25 years. Each theme was then used as a point of reference for analyzing how experimental design and hypothesis testing were treated in each publication. The third part of the review presents our critical analysis of how experimental design and hypothesis testing have been exploited in microbial biodiversity studies for each of the themes identified. We conclude with a series of guidelines for information that should be specified in microbial diversity publications with regard to experimental design and sampling strategies. These guidelines are intended to enhance the contribution of biodiversity studies to elucidating the significance of microbial biodiversity in ecological processes.

METHOD FOR ANALYZING THE SCIENTIFIC LITERATURE
Establishing the Database
This review is based on studies published in the primary literature
concerning eight types of microbial habitats: (i) aquatic systems
(continental and marine), (ii) soil, (iii) the rhizosphere,
(iv) mycorrhizae, (v) fungus-plant pathosystems, (vi) bacterium-plant
systems, (vii) food, and (viii) food-processing factories. For
soil and rhizosphere systems, we considered only symbiotic or
nonpathogenic bacteria. Plant pathogens were included in the
fungus-plant pathosystems and bacterium-plant systems. The latter
system also included nonpathogenic bacteria associated with
aerial plant parts, i.e., epiphytic bacteria in the phyllosphere.
Literature searches were conducted, as illustrated in Fig.
1,
using at least one of five bibliographic databases for the years
1975 to 1999: CAB, MedLine, Scifinder, PASCAL, and Food Science
and Technology Abstracts. Each database was searched for the
scientific fields for which it was relevant: CAB was interrogated
for fungus-plant pathosystems, bacterium-plant systems, mycorrhizae,
and food systems; MedLine was searched for food and aquatic
systems; Scifinder was searched for soil and rhizosphere systems;
PASCAL was searched for soil systems; and Food Science and Technology
Abstracts was searched for food-processing factory systems.
Trial searches were conducted to establish a set of consensus
terms and phrases to be used for all habitats. The consensus
terms and phrases were diversity, population structure, community
structure, variability, dominance, and numerical taxonomy. References
in the CAB, MedLine, Scifinder, and PASCAL databases with at
least one of these terms in the title, abstract, or key words
were retained for further consideration. However, most of these
terms and phrases were not appropriate for the Food Science
and Technology Abstracts database. This database was searched
based on the words diversity, contamination, incidence, prevalence,
occurrence, presence, characteristics, and characterization.
References were then further selected based on the presence
of key words relevant to each habitat. For each habitat, we
also established lists of terms and phrases used to exclude
the majority of irrelevant references. To exclude the irrelevant
references remaining after this step, the database was then
screened manually based on titles and contents of abstracts.
The references were compiled in EndNote (version 3.0; Niles
Software, Inc., Berkeley, Calif.), and duplicates were eliminated.
Our analysis of trends is based on the 2,200 references compiled.
The database of references may be obtained by contacting the
corresponding author.
Sampling and Descriptive Analysis of Publications
From the database of 2,200 references, 753 publications were
randomly selected for analysis. This was accomplished by selecting
about 100 of the total publications for each habitat according
to random-number tables. Sampling was stratified over the years
of publication so that each year was represented in the sample
in the same proportion that it was represented in the database.
Hence, between 12 and 56% of the publications were analyzed
for all habitats except foods and food-processing factories.
For these latter fields, all 40 and 39 references, respectively,
in the database were analyzed.
For each habitat, the randomly selected publications were characterized according to 17 criteria describing (i) the origin (culture collections, direct environmental samples, etc.) of the microorganisms or microbial nucleic acids studied and the overall approach to collecting samples, (ii) the precise parameters of the reported sampling strategy (use of random sampling protocols; size, weight, and volume of samples taken; and the number of individuals characterized), (iii) the microbiological and molecular biological techniques used to characterize diversity (Table 1), (iv) the calculation of diversity indices and the use of statistics to test the hypotheses evoked concerning microbial diversity, and (v) the use of replicated tests of the principal hypotheses evoked. Furthermore, the principal themes of each study were identified. For the publications analyzed, eight different themes were identified (Table 2). Most publications had only one principal theme, but a few papers had two (27%) or three (3%) principal themes. A descriptive quantitative analysis of the database was conducted to determine the relationships among the different parameters characterizing the publications (cooccurrence of the characteristics described, changes in occurrence with time, etc.). This analysis was based on procedures written in Scilab (http://www-rocq.inria.fr/scilab), a free general-purpose scientific software.
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TABLE 2. Synopsis of the objectives of publications in the primary literature on microbial biodiversity from 1975 to 1999 concerning eight different microbial habitats associated with water, soil, plants, foods, and food-processing factories
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Critical Analysis
For each of the eight themes identified in our analysis, we
constructed a stepwise procedure to evaluate the approaches
taken in addressing the principal objectives of the publications.
This procedure took into account the overall experimental approach
that we would expect for studies under each of the themes. For
example, for some of the themes we expected to find specific
information in the publication concerning the sampling strategy
and statistical tests used as well as descriptions of multiple
independent experiments relative to the central hypotheses.
The questions we addressed concerning the experimental approaches
used for each theme are presented in Fig.
2. Further details
concerning these questions are presented below.

DYNAMICS OF RESEARCH INTEREST IN MICROBIAL BIODIVERSITY SINCE 1975
Dynamics of Publication Rates
For the fields surveyed, the number of publications concerning
microbial biodiversity in the primary scientific literature
showed a marked increase in the early 1990s (Fig.
3A). This
increase was particularly striking for fields concerning plant-pathogenic
fungi and aquatic, soil, and rhizosphere systems (including
mycorrhizae) (Fig.
3B). For systems implicating food industries,
interest in microbial biodiversity did not develop until the
1990s and was prompted by food safety issues and the establishment
of hazard analysis protocols (
120). The overall increase in
the number of publications relevant to microbial biodiversity
does not simply reflect the increase in the total number of
studies published by the 525 different journals covered in this
census. For the 10 journals publishing most frequently in the
field of microbial biodiversity (Table
3), the percentage of
studies devoted to microbial biodiversity among all the studies
published also showed a marked increase in the early 1990s.
For example, the publication rate of microbial biodiversity
studies increased from only 0.5% of the 589 articles published
in 1988 by
Applied and Environmental Microbiology to 6% of the
876 studies published by this journal in 1999. Overall,
Applied and Environmental Microbiology published the greatest number
of studies concerning microbial biodiversity in general (Table
3), as well as for aquatic, soil, and rhizosphere habitats,
and was the second most frequent publisher of studies concerning
bacterium-plant systems. However, studies concerning the biodiversity
of fungus-plant pathosystems were published primarily in
Phytopathology and in
Mycological Research, those concerning mycorrhizae were
published primarily in
New Phytologist and
Canadian Journal of Botany, and those concerning foods and food industries were
published primarily in
Journal of Food Protection,
Journal of Applied Bacteriology, and
International Journal of Food Microbiology.
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TABLE 3. Number of publications concerning the biodiversity of microorganisms (bacteria and fungi) in eight different microbial habitats associated with water, soil, plants, foods, and food-processing factories published from 1975 to 1999 by the 10 journals publishing these types of studies most frequently
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Major Research Themes and Objectives
The classification of publications according to themes (Table
2) was an essential step in the elaboration of this review since
it permitted us to clearly develop the analysis of approaches
used for experimental design and hypothesis testing. We present
these themes not only to provide an overview of the types of
questions preoccupying the field of microbial biodiversity but
also to give insight into how we have classified the studies
analyzed here. Each theme has been accorded an acronym to facilitate
reference to the theme (Table
2).
Composition and structure of microbial populations and communities.
The description of the composition and structure of microbial populations and communities is an important starting point in studies of microbial biodiversity and sets the stage for fundamental studies concerning how these populations and communities function. Hence, it is not surprising that the basic description of community composition or structure (theme Describe) coupled with the impact of space and time on these parameters (theme Dynamics) was the central theme of over half of the publications analyzed here and was relevant to all habitats surveyed (Table 4). Although descriptive studies (theme Describe) have been dominant in the microbial biodiversity literature considered as a whole, publication of such studies has declined over time whereas reports of spatial and temporal dynamics of microbial biodiversity (theme Dynamics) have become more abundant (Fig. 4).
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TABLE 4. Distribution of publications among the principal themes of studies of microbial biodiversity in the primary literature from 1975 to 1999 concerning eight different microbial habitats associated with water, soil, plants, foods, and food-processing factories
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Microbial populations and communities have been described in
terms of a wide range of phenotypic traits, many of which are
related to the practical interest in the habitat studied, as
listed in Table
2. Numerous studies have also exploited molecular
characterization of nucleic acids in order to describe microorganisms;
examples of these are cited throughout this review. In aquatic
systems in particular, an important set of studies related to
the theme
Describe has concerned exploratory investigations
using culture-independent methods (clone libraries) to determine
the species composition of bacterial communities (Table
2).
The impact of time and space on population composition or structure (theme Dynamics) has been investigated to understand the origin and spread of populations of beneficial and of deleterious microorganisms or the probable relationship among organisms from different geographical locations. For systems concerning plant or human pathogens or bacteria involved in food spoilage, these questions have been linked to an interest in disease epidemiology, in the efficiency and durability of practices for control of crop and food losses, and in food safety issues (Table 2). For aquatic systems, studies under this theme have concerned vertical and horizontal spatial variability at a range of scales and short-term as well as seasonal dynamics (Table 2).
Impact of environmental factors on microbial biodiversity.
The effect of environmental factors on microbial diversity (theme Effect) has been a major theme of study for soil and rhizosphere microbial systems and for mycorrhizae (Table 4). Interest in this theme has increased markedly over the past 25 years (Fig. 4). Studies under this theme are apparently motivated by the possibility of modifying the factor of interest via soil or forest management practices, for example. For rhizosphere and soil communities, there has been considerable interest in the relationship between microbial biodiversity and plant health, plant productivity, and the efficiency of ecological processes such as nutrient cycling and phytoremediation (Table 2). For mycorrhizal fungi, interest in their biodiversity arises from the observations that these fungi play a major role in the floristic diversity and structure of plant communities (273).
Studies under this theme relative to soil, rhizosphere, and mycorrhizal systems have addressed the impact of two principal factors on microbial diversity: the properties of the soil and the nature of the plant species. The soil properties studied have been overwhelmingly those related to agricultural and other land management practices and to pollution (Table 2). In studies of aquatic habitats, only a few papers concern the effect of specific factors on the structure of bacterial communities. They are related to the effect of anthropogenic disturbances (mainly pollutants) and to the response of natural communities to natural environmental changes (temperature, salinity, etc.) (Table 2).
Microbial biodiversity as an epidemiological tool.
For all habitats considered together, relatively few publications have clearly linked the concepts of epidemiology and microbial biodiversity (Table 4; Fig. 4). However, studies of microbial biodiversity addressing epidemiological questions (theme Source) have been of interest for habitats concerning human pathogens and occasionally for those containing plant pathogens. Studies under this theme have compared phenotypic and genotypic profiles of strains from different origins as a means of determining possible sources of contamination of foods or sources of outbreaks of plant disease (Table 2).
Markers to facilitate diagnosis and identification.
Characterization of microbial biodiversity as a means of discerning markers useful for diagnosis or microbial identification (theme Markers) has been a major theme of studies concerning plant-associated bacteria (Table 4), where the development of such markers is a matter of particular interest for tracing bacteria in ecological studies and for avoiding the need for time-consuming tests of pathogenicity and host range (Table 2). Markers have also been sought for other types of microorganisms as a means of rapidly identifying phenotypes whose laboratory characterization is laborious, such as the efficiency of mycorrhization, or as a means of facilitating the identification of organisms that are complicated to identify, such as certain mycorrhizal fungi (Table 2).
Methods for studying microbial biodiversity.
Interest in methods for studying microbial biodiversity (theme Methods) has grown steadily since 1975 (Fig. 4). However, among the 94 publications analyzed that evaluated methods applicable to the characterization of microbial biodiversity, 90 concerned the evaluation of laboratory methods for characterizing microorganisms and over half of these focused on evaluating methods for the analysis of total DNA or targeted DNA sequences in a sample. Only four studies focused on the effect of experimental designs or sampling procedures on measures of biodiversity (Table 2). Nevertheless, methodological information was presented in other studies that we analyzed, but to a much more limited extent than in the four publications just mentioned, and it was not the principal objective of the publications.
Phylogenetic and taxonomic studies.
Biodiversity studies motivated by phylogenetic or taxonomic comparisons of a given group of microorganisms (theme Relatedness) have focused primarily on bacteria and reflect the historical tribulations surrounding the definition of bacterial species and the relatedness among individuals of different genotypes. In our database, the frequency of publications under this theme decreased with time (Fig. 4). Since interest in microbial phylogeny probably is not waning, this trend likely reflects the fact that the key words used for our bibliographic searches are employed less and less frequently in publications addressing microbial phylogeny and taxonomy. Nearly half of the biodiversity studies concerning aquatic systems were relevant to the theme Relatedness (Table 4). An important motivation for studies of this habitat is that less than 1% of aquatic picoplanktonthe organisms that constitute the fundamental basis for the functioning of these systemscan be cultured. Hence, there is a prevailing interest in describing organisms that were inaccessible prior to the advent of culture-independent techniques. Culture-independent direct retrieval of 16S rDNA was used extensively in the early 1990s to characterize unknown and uncultured species in aquatic systems (Table 2). Most of these studies provide sequences of the isolated 16S rDNA and localize these "phylotypes" in the tree of life. For bacteria that are pathogenic to plants or animals, studies under the theme Relatedness have been motivated by very practical concerns. The taxonomic variability of causal agents of plant and animal diseases has been investigated because it is intimately linked to questions concerning epidemiology (disease origin) and can be useful in subsequent identification of markers for detection (Table 2).
Discovery of new taxa.
The search for new species or taxa (theme New) was a relatively rare theme (Table 4), which has increased slightly in importance over the past few years (Fig. 4). For aquatic systems, studies under this theme generally were derived from phylogenetic or taxonomic studies (theme Relatedness) and focused on the occurrence of new species in a few samples with the aim of finding new DNA sequences (Table 2). For soil and rhizosphere systems, studies under this theme have sought to demonstrate the high degree of bacterial diversity and the presence of nonculturable new species by using direct soil extraction followed by molecular phylogenetic analysis (Table 2). However, the search for new species or taxa in soil and rhizosphere systems has also addressed culturable bacteria (Table 2).
Methods Used for Characterizing Biodiversity
To describe how the different techniques presented in Table
1 were used in biodiversity studies over the last 25 years,
we calculated the frequency at which these techniques were reported
and their coincidence with the different themes (Table
5). For
all publications considered as a whole, and for many of the
habitats or themes considered independently, DNA-based characterization
techniquesand in particular those based on targeted DNA
sequences such as 16S rDNA, specific repeated sequences, or
genes for virulence of pathogenshad the most dominant
role in biodiversity studies relative to all other types of
techniques (Table
5). Furthermore, DNA-based characterization
techniques had the greatest growth rate over the past 25 years
compared to all other types of techniques for characterizing
microbial diversity. The percentage of published articles that
reported the use of DNA-based characterization techniques was
9% in the period from 1975 to 1988, 27% from 1989 to 1993, 35%
from 1994 to 1995, and 40 to 50% thereafter. Nevertheless, in
spite of the important role of DNA-based characterization techniques,
tests based on the characterization of phenotypes played a predominant
role for four of the habitats. Characterization of microorganisms
based on their metabolism, morphology, or ability to grow on
selective media were the predominant approaches in studies of
soil, mycorrhizae, food, and food-processing factories. The
role of phenotypic tests for these systems is related to the
frequent use of the BIOLOG system for characterizing soil microorganisms,
the ease of characterizing certain mycorrhizal fungi by their
morphological features, and the importance of standardized culture
methods for food-borne pathogens.
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TABLE 5. Percentage of articles published from 1975 to 1999 reporting the results of studies of microbial biodiversity based on analysis of total or targeted DNA sequences or on characterization of phenotypic properties
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Although DNA-based characterization techniques had an overall
dominant role in studies of microbial biodiversity, their importance
was more restricted when studies were classed by theme. In fact,
DNA-based techniques had the most dominant role in studies of
the phylogenetic and taxonomic relationships among organisms
(theme
Relatedness) and in the search for new species or taxa
(theme
New) (Table
5). As indicated above, the evaluation of
methods (theme
Methods) has also focused principally on characterization
of microbial DNA. Conversely, studies concerning the effect
of an environmental factor and the description of structure
and composition relied more heavily on characterization of microbial
phenotypes than on characterization of genotypes. This trend
was consistent for all systems except aquatic systems.
These trends led us to wonder if the predominance of phenotypic tests in studies of microbial biodiversity is related to the role of known, specific microbial functions in a habitat. Studies of plant and animal pathogens and of symbiotic microorganisms provided a large enough database to permit us to analyze trends concerning the use of direct tests of pathogenicity and of symbiosis. We based this analysis on 117 publications that concerned the characterization of processes related to pathogenesis or symbiosis: 45 publications for fungus-plant pathosystems, 37 for bacterium-plant systems, 14 for rhizosphere systems, 13 for mycorrhizae, and the remainder for soils, foods, and food-processing factories. The objectives of these studies were, for example, to determine the similarity of populations of a given plant pathogen from different origins or the overall diversity within a specific group of a plant pathogen or food spoilage organism (11, 16, 32, 51, 62, 121, 142, 152, 189, 221). We did not consider studies focused solely on molecular phylogenetics or on the diversity of specific alleles within pathogen or symbiont populations. For the database considered as a whole, pathogenicity or symbiotic host range testing was frequent for studies in all the habitats represented in the 117 publications. However, over time there has been a general tendency for fewer and fewer studies to carry out this type of characterization, as illustrated in Fig. 5. This tendency could possibly be explained by the increasing availability of markers for properties related to pathogenesis (72, 196, 277) or to symbiosis (2, 148, 159, 185). However, we did not find many discussions concerning how markers were good estimates of the pathogenicity or the symbiotic potential of the organisms studied when direct tests of these properties were not used in the studies described in the 117 publications analyzed. This tendency suggests that direct characterization of the pathogenicity or symbiotic potential of microorganisms in biodiversity studies is being progressively abandoned and is not necessarily being replaced by unambiguous markers of these microbial functions. Part of the impetus for reducing the use of pathogenicity tests may reside in the intensification of quarantine and biosecurity constraints in the handling of plant pathogens such as Ralstonia solanacearum and certain species of Cercospora or Fusarium, for example, or for genetically engineered microorganisms. The manipulation of human and animal pathogens in general and the handling of indicator animals used in evaluating pathogenicity are also subject to increasing constraints that may contribute to this trend. For pathogens and symbionts alike, constraints of time and labor may also orient research programs away from approaches requiring these types of phenotypic characterization.

APPROACHES TO EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN AND HYPOTHESIS TESTING
The objectives of three of the themes described above involve
the testing of hypotheses about the effect of the environment,
space, or time on microbial biodiversity (themes
Effect,
Dynamics,
and
Source). Examples of hypotheses under these themes, stated
in a general way, include the following: there is no significant
variation in the structure of the population of a given plant
pathogen over time or between geographic regions (
32,
39), and
plant species have a significant effect on the biodiversity
of microorganisms in the rhizosphere (
19,
95,
171,
205,
252).
The test of such hypotheses necessitates well-developed experimental
design leading to statistical tests. Because of the analogies
that can be made among these three themes, we have grouped them
for the analysis presented below. The objectives of the remaining
themes focusto various degreeson description of
the composition or structure of microbial populations or communities.
The principal questions we addressed in the analysis of experimental
approaches were unique for each of these themes (Fig.
2), and
hence, we present each of them independently.
Measuring the Impact of the Environment, Space, and Time
The objectives of more than half of the microbial biodiversity
studies published over the past 25 years were to measure the
effect of a specific environmental factor on biodiversity, to
measure the changes in biodiversity over time and space, or
to compare the similarity of a population of pathogens at a
given site with that of the population at a suspected source
of contamination (themes
Effect,
Dynamics, and
Source) (Table
4). These objectives are analogous to a wide range of seemingly
straightforward objectives such as determining the effect of
fertilizers on crop yield or the changes in lichen density with
increasing distance from a refinery. Hence, we extrapolated
the main principles guiding experimental design and hypothesis
testing from these latter systems to the analysis of microbial
biodiversity in the themes
Effect,
Dynamics, and
Source. As
a first step in characterizing the experimental designs reported
in studies under these three themes, we noted whether a sampling
strategy was clearly described (Fig.
2). Specifically, we determined
if either (i) the space and time within which samples were collected
were defined or (ii) information was presented concerning how
the samples accounted for the variability inherent to the sampling
procedure. For these studies, we then noted if statistical tests
were used to evaluate the hypotheses evoked concerning biodiversity
and if the study reported multiple independent tests of these
hypotheses (Fig.
2).
For the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source considered as a whole, one-third of the 471 publications analyzed did not report a sampling strategy (Table 6). These publications lacked information about the basis for choosing the samples or strains characterized and/or information about the size, weight, volume, or frequency of samples taken. For these studies, there was insufficient information to determine how an independent but comparable sample could be taken. Hence, we could not ascertain the extent to which the characterized organisms represented the population studied or to what extent the results could be compared to those of studies of similar microorganisms. For 6% of these 471 publications, the study was based solely on the use of strains from culture collections. In nearly all studies that employed strains from culture collections, the only information reported concerned their taxonomic identification and the date, location, and environment from which they were isolated. Nevertheless, a few publications indicated how strains from culture collections had been isolated, and we considered this to be part of the description of a sampling strategy. The frequency of studies reporting sampling strategies varied among the habitats. Publications concerning soil and rhizosphere systems, mycorrhizae, fungus-plant pathosystems, and food most frequently reported sampling strategies (Table 6). For all habitats considered together, there was no discernible effect of time on the frequency at which sampling strategies were reported in publications.
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TABLE 6. Number of publications reporting sampling strategies, use of statistical analyses to test hypotheses concerning microbial biodiversity, and replicated tests of hypotheses for the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source
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Among the 314 publications in the themes
Effect,
Dynamics, and
Source that reported sampling strategies, about 50% also reported
values of diversity indices and subsequently employed statistics
to test hypotheses concerning biodiversity (Table
6). There
were marked differences among the three themes in terms of the
frequency with which diversity indices and subsequent statistical
tests were employed: 60% of the publications reporting sampling
strategies in the theme
Effect also employed indices and statistical
tests, while 47% of those in the theme
Dynamics and 27% of those
in the theme
Source did so. For the publications in which statistical
tests of hypotheses were not employed, many reported experimental
designs and data equivalent to those reported in studies employing
statistics. For most of these publications, it was not clear
why statistical tests were not exploited. A few indicated that
they did not have a sufficient number of replications (
83).
Another (
213) clearly stated that statistical tests were considered
inappropriate in light of the high variability of mycorrhizal
types observed in the large number of samples analyzed. About
8% of the 146 publications that lacked descriptions of sampling
strategies under these three themes nevertheless reported statistical
evaluations of the hypotheses evoked.
A wide variety of approaches were used for calculating diversity indices and for performing statistical tests of hypotheses. To summarize these approaches, we classified measures of diversity as either primary indices or secondary or composite indices. Primary indices were direct measures of population parameters not requiring any particular calculation or confounding of species (or taxon) richness with relative abundance and identity. In general, these were direct measures of the abundance or relative frequency of phenotypes or genotypes observed in a sample. All other types of indices, such as the Shannon-Wiener diversity index (Hs) (239), Simpson's diversity index (
) (244), and Nei's index for genetic diversity (IN) (195), were considered to be composite indices. In Table 7 we summarize how primary and composite indices have been coupled with the use of parametric and nonparametric statistical tests.
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TABLE 7. Measures of diversity and statistical tests used to evaluate the effect of environmental factors, space, or time (themes Effect and Dynamics) on microbial biodiversity or to compare microbial populations with the objective of identifying sources of contamination or inoculum (theme Source)
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The work of Chen et al. (
40) clearly illustrates how the nature
of primary and composite diversity indices constrains the choice
of parametric and nonparametric statistics for hypothesis testing
in microbial biodiversity studies. These workers sought to determine
if there were changes in the genetic diversity of populations
of the plant pathogenic fungus
Mycospharella graminicola during
disease epidemics on wheat. Genetic diversity was measured in
terms of the frequency of alleles at different restriction fragment
length polymorphism (RFLP) loci in isolates of the fungus collected
at different times in each of three seasons at one experimental
site. For example, to test the difference in genetic diversity
between early-season and late-season populations, a contingency
2 test was employed to compare allelic frequencies at each of
eight different RFLP loci determined for each of 444 strains
collected in 1990 (about one-third of which were collected early
in the season, and the rest were collected late in the season).
Likewise, the difference in genetic diversity of populations
from three different years was evaluated by the same statistical
test by comparing allelic frequencies for each of 10 RFLP loci
for the late-season strains collected in 1990 and 58 late-season
strains collected in 1991 and 1992. No significant differences
were revealed at any of the loci. The authors then calculated
various indices of genetic diversity including Nei's index for
the different loci at each date. Nei's index is analogous to
the Shannon-Wiener index and summarizes the number and relative
abundance of different genotypes in a sample without accounting
for the identity of the genotypes encountered. Furthermore,
the value for such an index calculated from data for a single
sample is not associated with a measure of variance. Population
variance must be measured from multiple samples from the same
population. Alternatively, some authors have exploited methods
proposed for estimating the theoretical variance of composite
diversity indices via simulation or calculations (
25,
276,
277).
Hence, for diversity based on Nei's index, Chen et al. (
40)
used parametric tests (
t tests) to evaluate differences in genetic
diversity for situations in which they had measures of variance.
By using
t tests, they compared genetic diversity at different
dates or different times in a single year by considering the
indices for each of the loci to be replicate measures within
a given time. However, the indices for the multiple loci of
a single set of strains are not necessarily bona fide independent
replicate measures.
Other studies can also serve to illustrate how the types of replication and measures of variability inherent to experimental design influence the coupling of diversity indices to parametric and nonparametric tests, as illustrated in Table 7. Hallmann et al. (93) conducted parametric tests based on composite diversity indices by establishing replicated measures, sensu stricto, of these indices. For chitin-amended and nonamended soils, these authors calculated the number of different bacterial genera and Hill's diversity number (N1) for samples of 35 bacterial strains from each of four replicate plots per treatment. For each index, least-significant-difference tests were used to compare diversity based on the four values measured per treatment. Helm et al. (105) used one-way analysis of variance and the nonparametric Kruskal-Wallis test to evaluate differences in fungal diversity in terms of the infection percentages for different ectomycorrhizal types along a chronosequence of different plant species. Xia et al. (288) employed a nonparametric test to evaluate heterogeneity among primary indices of genetic diversity. To determine variation in diversity of the plant pathogen Magnaporthe grisea among sites within individual fields of rice, these authors determined the DNA fingerprints of 7 to 21 strains collected at each of five sites within two commercial rice fields. Within-field spatial heterogeneity of diversity was determined by a
2 test based on the frequency of RFLP fingerprint groups in the five locations per field. Although Nei's index of genetic similarity was calculated in this study, it was not employed in statistical tests. The use of nonparametric tests for primary indices was also illustrated by Carraminana et al. (34). These authors used a
2 test to evaluate the difference in frequency of serotypes among strains of Salmonella collected in poultry slaughterhouses before and after evisceration of carcasses.
Another aspect of experimental design that we noted for the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source was the reporting of multiple independent tests of hypotheses (Fig 2). Of the 471 publications analyzed in these three themes, about 5% reported multiple independent tests of hypotheses (Table 6). For the 168 that described sampling strategies and employed statistics for testing hypotheses, about 20% reported multiple independent tests of these hypotheses. Nearly all studies under the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source employed replication to ensure the reliability of the microbial traits characterized in the laboratory. However, most of these studies were based solely on samples from a single location and/or a single date. Hence, multiple independent tests of the principal hypotheses were not possible for these studies.
Examples of studies involving multiple tests of hypotheses include the work of Mahaffee and Kloepper (169), who evaluated the effect of a genetically modified strain of a plant growth-promoting Pseudomonas fluorescens on microbial communities of the cucumber rhizosphere and endorhiza. The microbial diversity of the rhizosphere and endorhiza of inoculated and noninoculated experimental plots did not differ significantly between treatments but was different between 0 and 70 days after planting. Similar results were obtained in each of two field seasons. Jonsson et al. (127) evaluated the effect of wildfires on the ectomycorrhizal fungal communities of Scots pine. To conduct replicated tests of the hypothesis that wildfires have significant effects on mycorrhizal population structure, these authors compared the mycorrhizal populations in burned and adjacent unburned late-successional stands of Scots pine at four different sites in northern Sweden. Asher (11) tested the hypothesis that the aggressiveness of strains of the plant pathogen Gaeumannomyces graminis from fields continuously cultivated with cereal crops is lower than that of strains from fields in which cereals are grown only occasionally. Measures of the aggressiveness of the populations were made from two sites, one representing a short-term (2 or 3 preceding cereal crops) and the other a long-term (12 to 15 preceding cereal crops) cereal sequence. Four tests were done, each with isolates from the two different types of sites. Statistical comparisons among populations from the two types of sites led to the rejection of the hypothesis. Zhan et al. (293) sought to determine the relative contribution of immigration to the genetic structure of Mycosphaerella graminicola populations during the course of an epidemic. They used neutral DNA markers to compare the population structure in wheat plots inoculated with known isolates to that in naturally infected control plots. Field plots were arranged in a randomized complete block design with four replications, and comparisons of allelic frequencies were based on a contingency
2 test. Significant differences were observed in allelic frequencies in populations from control and inoculated plots, suggesting that immigration was low. These differences were evaluated for numerous different alleles and pairs of alleles for both mid-season and late-season populations but for only one field experiment. Heuer and Smalla (109) compared the diversity of bacteria on leaves of common potato cultivars to that on leaves of genetically modified potato plants expressing the bacteriophage T4 lysozyme. Comparisons were made in a greenhouse experiment as well as in a field trial. Other examples of multiple tests of hypotheses under the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source are reported by Bever et al. (19), Burdon and Jarosz (32), Chen et al. (39), Garland (75), Handley et al. (95), Hartmann et al. (99), Maloney et al. (171), Marilley et al. (173), Paffetti et al. (205), Safir et al. (227), Sanders (231), and Strain et al. (252).
One of the central purposes of experimental design is to ensure that the measures reported in a publication are repeatable and not due simply to random error. This notion is clearly evoked in the Instructions to Authors of the major journals publishing studies of microbial biodiversity. However, our analysis of the trends in experimental design for publications in the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source suggests that few publications (about 5%) report repeated measures of the phenomena that are central to the principal objectives of the studies. In other words, publications reporting multiple independent tests of hypotheses were rare. Perhaps verifications of the hypotheses addressed in these publications are, or will be, the subject of subsequent publications. Alternatively, the investment in time and labor for multiple tests of hypotheses may have been prohibitive for some studies. For certain studies, such as those addressing changes in population structure or composition over decades (196) or across a wide range of geographic regions (189), multiple independent tests are virtually impossible or very impractical. However, for other types of studies, we could not identify what led to the publication of results of only a single experiment, a single sampling campaign, or a single set of strains.
The lack of repeated tests of hypotheses and the infrequent use of statistical tests led to some ambiguity in the conclusions presented in many of the publications in the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source. It is important to note that the conclusions stated in most of the publications analyzed here were cautiously elaborated with regard to interpretation of the results. Hence, we encountered relatively few publications that presented unambiguous conclusions about the effect of specific factors, time, or space on microbial biodiversity. The least ambiguous conclusions were presented in publications reporting sampling strategies and the use of statistical tests. The Discussion sections of many of the publications in these three themes focused on the utility of the techniques employed for microbial characterization rather than on the major ecological theme of the study.
Above, we speculated about why multiple independent tests of hypotheses are not commonly reported in the microbial biodiversity literature. We also wonder why statistical tests are infrequently employed in publications relevant to the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source. We encountered numerous publications with clearly defined sampling strategies and experimental design for which statistics were not reported but for which they would have been appropriate to test the hypotheses evoked. The reporting of sampling strategies coupled to the use of statistical tests of hypotheses was clearly more typical of studies of certain habitats than of others. In particular, publications concerning soil, the rhizosphere, and fungi in general most frequently reported these aspects of experimental design and hypothesis testing. This tendency has led us to wonder if the scientific literature concerning the microbial biodiversity of a given habitat has a broad impact, in particular on studies of apparently unrelated habitats.
What are the possible barriers to a broad impact of the microbial biodiversity literature among different habitats? One barrier may result from the techniques typically used for isolating and characterizing the microorganisms of a given habitat. These techniques may sharply orient experimental design and may make it difficult to extrapolate experimental designs from one system to another. In particular, for habitats where microorganisms are readily culturable and identifiable, it may be relatively easy to design experiments leading to data sets compatible with the calculation of indices, measures of variability, and statistics. It is interesting that none of the studies analyzed for the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source concerning aquatic systems employed statistics; most of these studies were based on the characterization of the DNA representing nonculturable organisms. Characterization of microorganisms based on DNA extraction from environmental samples followed by PCR amplification, cloning, and sequencing, as was employed for most of the studies in the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source for aquatic systems, is very demanding of time and labor. Furthermore, strategies to randomly sample the generated clones so as to represent the relative proportions of organisms in the environment are not obvious. However, this type of characterization has been of great interest because it can lead to identification at the species and strain levels. Recently developed approaches to discriminating isolated nucleotide sequences, such as single-strand conformation polymorphism, terminal RFLP, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis, and related techniques, may lead to better compatibility of characterization of DNA extracted from the environment with experimental designs leading to statistical tests, as illustrated by the work of van Hannen et al. (274).
Alternatively, other approaches to characterizing noncultured microorganisms have proven to be compatible with statistical analyses. For example, communities of microorganisms have been characterized by direct analysis of the fatty acids in phospholipids or in lipopolysaccharides extracted from environmental samples. The ease of this technique and the obvious relationship between the fatty acid composition in the sample to that in the environment have led to statistical analyses of the resulting fatty acid profiles (37, 69, 117, 211, 242, 292). Nevertheless, this technique is less discriminating and therefore less interesting because the resulting profiles correspond to broad taxonomic groups such as actinomycetes, gram-positive or gram-negative bacteria, or anaerobic bacteria. Nonculturable mycorrhizal fungi, as well as fungi that are obligate plant parasites, have also been the object of studies exploiting statistical analyses (33, 227). Quantitative measures of the biodiversity of these fungi in particular might be readily accessible because they can be identified by morphological characteristics even though they are not culturable. Nevertheless, statistical tests are, in general, infrequently employed even for publications concerning habitats where microorganisms are readily culturable and identifiable. Hence, there is a need for considerable reflection about the barriers to statistical analyses and multiple independent tests of hypotheses in publications concerning microbial biodiversity.
Snapshotting the Composition and Structure of Microbial Populations and Communities
Studies in the theme
Describe focused on either describing the
composition of microbial populations or evaluating the structure
of these populations independent of the effects of time and
space. In our analysis, we made a clear distinction between
the notions of composition and structure. We defined structural
studies as those reporting quantitative measures of the relative
abundance of the different groups of organisms characterized
and compositional studies as those that either enumerated or
identified the different groups detectable in a population or
community. Although numerous publications employed "structure"
in the title or key words, they were not considered to be studies
of structure unless quantitative measures of relative abundances
were presented. In the absence of such quantitative measures,
publications were considered to represent compositional studies
for this analysis. For studies of population structure, our
analysis consisted of determining if a sampling strategy was
described in the publication and if there was an estimation
of the variance associated with the structure of the described
population. For studies of population composition in the theme
Describe, we noted if the authors attempted to justify or evaluate
how well the sample represented the population being studied
(Fig.
2).
Studies of microbial populations and communities under the theme Describe have focused primarily on quantification of population structure (Table 8). These studies have quantified population structure by measuring parameters such as (i) the relative abundance of ribotypes or of strains resistant to various antibiotics in rhizosphere bacterial populations to which strains of Pseudomonas fluorescens active as biocontrol agents were introduced (193), (ii) the relative abundance of DNA fingerprint groups of Aspergillus parasiticus from a corn field (177), and (iii) the frequency of alleles within the ribosomal DNA intergenic spacer of Hebeloma cylindrosporium from populations of this haploid ectomycorrhizal basidiomycete (90). Hence, the representativeness of a sample relative to the overall population is a central issue for these studies. Nevertheless, only two-thirds of the 118 studies of population structure that we analyzed reported sampling strategies (Table 8).
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TABLE 8. Characteristics of publications in the theme Describe concerning the evaluation of the composition or structure of a microbial population or community independent of time and location
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For studies describing the composition of microbial populations,
only 16% reported information concerning how the sample was
taken or in what way it represented the population (Table
8).
Among the publications presenting information concerning the
representativeness of the sample, a few included rarefaction
curves. Rarefaction curves represent the rate at which new groups
(species, genotypes, etc.) are detected as the sample size increases.
The asymptote of the curve is considered to be an estimate of
the number of different groups in the total population (
230,
265). The use of rarefaction curves is standard fare in studies
of the biodiversity of macroscopic organisms, and their potential
use in microbial diversity studies has been recently well illustrated
(
114). Among the publications analyzed here, that of Goodman
and Trofymow (
83) used rarefaction curves to estimate the rate
at which new mycorrhizal types were found and also to estimate
total richness. Ingleby et al. (
119) also used similar curves
to compare mycorrhizal diversity (i.e., the cumulative number
of different mycorrhizal types) under different plant canopy
types. Other examples include the studies by Hantula et al.
(
96), Ravenschlag et al. (
215), and Sakano and Kerkhof (
228)
for aquatic systems, Clawson and Benson (
42), Dunbar et al.
(
56), and Handley et al. (
95) for rhizosphere systems, and Torsvik
et al. (
266) for soil systems.
The notion of representativeness has a twofold implication for experimental design. First, it is clear that experimental design must take into account the extent to which laboratory tests represent microbial phenotypes and genotypes. This has been of overwhelming interest to microbiologists, as illustrated by the abundance of publications that evaluate assays for phenotypic and genotypic characterizations. Furthermore, the principal types of replication reported in studies of microbial biodiversity pertain to the confirmation of results of such assays. The second implication of representativeness is the extent to which the sample of organisms or their DNA represents a population or a community. For both of these aspects of representativeness, one is compelled to ask if we are studying artifacts and in what way our estimate of the properties of the population or the community is biased. However, it should be kept in mind that the representativeness of a sample vis-à-vis a population is the foundation on which the representativeness of characterization assays rests.
What does "representativeness of a sample" mean? Clearly, for practical and technical reasons, it cannot mean that every taxon in the community is represented in the sample. The growing interest in identifying new taxa and the development of techniques to account for nonculturable microorganismsmajor objectives of the Diversitas program and of recent research programs (223)may be helpful in broadening the scope of biodiversity studies, but they are not intended to address representativeness per se. "Representativeness of a sample" simply means that we can define what the sample represents. The aim of a sampling strategy is to render this definition compatible with the objective of the study. For studies where, for example, the objective is to quantify population structure, the sampling strategy employed should lead to samples in which the proportion of each type or group detected is equivalent to that in the population, within the limits of detection corresponding to the sample size.
Of course, this is a proposition for an ideal world with no sampling biases. Sampling errors and biases are inevitable, and they limit the extent to which approaches such as rarefaction can be used to investigate the representativeness of a sample. Kinkel et al. (139) clearly illustrated how sampling of microbial systems misrepresents the underlying species frequency distributions in the population. Their analysis was based on random sampling of simulated microbial populations having different species abundance distributions (lognormal and negative binomial distributions with different degrees of skewedness) but each having 100 species. Random sampling revealed that depending on sample size, communities with distinctly different species abundance distributions could not be differentiated. Likewise, extrapolations made from identical populations could lead to the conclusion that the populations had distinctly different species abundances. Real-world sampling combines the basic probabilistic errors described by Kinkel et al. with the biological biases of microbiological and molecular biological sampling techniques. Rarefaction and simulated estimates of variance of diversity measures are constrained by the information contained within the sample and do not account for sampling biases unless they have been measured experimentally. Hence, one can understand the importance of replicated sampling and of multiple independent experiments for measures of population structure. Furthermore, it is evident that the results of studies describing the composition of microbial populations are also affected by the way in which the sampling strategy conditions the representativeness of a sample.
Discerning Markers for Diagnosis and Identification
The notion of representativeness is also particularly pertinent
to the search for markers. Many of these studies have relied
heavily on characterization of strains from culture collections
in order to span the geographical and temporal variability of
the microorganisms of interest. Hence, we did not consider sampling
strategy per se to be a fundamental issue in the overall approach
taken for publications in the theme
Markers. Rather, for publications
in this theme, we noted if the authors explained the basis for
choosing the strains or sample from which they identified markers
or if there was any discussion about what the strains or samples
represented. Furthermore, we also noted the use of strains outside
of the taxonomic group for which the markers were identified
and the use of independent samples (or collections) to validate
the accuracy of the markers (Fig.
2).
The search for markers was dominated by studies of plant-pathogenic and phyllosphere bacteria and of mycorrhizal fungi, although there were examples of such studies for nearly all habitats. For bacteria, 88% of the studies published under this theme sought markers of taxonomic groups, whereas the studies of mycorrhizae were equally divided between the search for taxonomic groups and the search for functional groups. The experimental design and sampling strategies associated with these studies clearly influenced how we interpreted the results. In particular, for nearly all of the studies under the theme Markers, it is difficult to evaluate the potential utility of the markers in terms of the fraction of the naturally occurring population they could detect or identify. This difficulty arises from the fact that none of the 69 studies concerning markers presented information describing how the sample represented the inherent variability of the population and only 2 of these studies tested the validity of the reported markers against a collection or sample of strains independent of that used to develop the markers (158, 251).
To illustrate the impact of representativeness for studies in the theme Markers, we calculated rarefaction curves based on data presented in two studies in which markers of bacterial identity were developed (Fig. 6). In presenting these curves, we keep in mind the limits of rarefaction cited above. These curves suggest that the 19 different RFLP groups described for a collection of 137 strains of Erwinia carotovora (104) represent a value much closer to the asymptotic value than the 28 groups described for the 62 strains of Ralstonia (formerly Pseudomonas) solanacearum (47) (Fig. 6). Hence, in the application of these markers to the identification of strains of these bacteria, there would be a high probability that newly collected strains of R. solanacearum would fall into RFLP groups not described by Cook et al. (47) whereas newly collected strains of E. carotovora would be much more likely to be represented by one of the RFLP groups described by Hélias et al. (104). Such a comparison is based on the assumption that both sets of strains are equally representative of their respective populations. Nevertheless, such estimates could be useful in orienting studies toward the number of strains necessary for characterizing markers with the desired level of accuracy. Ultimately, the validity of such estimates can be confirmed by testing markers against additional samples or collections of strains.
Defining Relatedness among Microorganisms
Many of the publications concerning microbial phylogeny and
taxonomy (theme
Relatedness), similar to those concerning the
theme
Markers, were based on the use of strains from culture
collections. Nevertheless, there were also numerous examples
of studies in this theme involving the isolation of strains
via culture methods and of DNA representing nonculturable microorganisms.
Hence, in the analysis of publications under the theme
Relatedness,
we looked for information concerning sampling strategies or
other descriptions of the representativeness of the organisms
characterized. Furthermore, because of the nature of the numerical
analyses employed in these studies, we also noted the number
of strains used to represent each operational taxonomic unit
described (Fig.
2).
The approach taken for biodiversity studies concerning microbial phylogeny or taxonomy was clearly dependent on the habitat involved. For aquatic systems, nearly 70% of the studies under the theme Relatedness exploited phylogenetic analysis of nucleic acid sequences isolated from diverse aquatic environments. Nevertheless, only one-fourth of the studies of such sequences reported the strategies involved in sampling. For rhizosphere systems, about 40% of the studies under the theme Relatedness were based on strains from culture collections, another 40% were based on strains collected via culture-dependent techniques, and 20% were based on the analysis of nucleic acid sequences isolated from the environment. Only 2 of the 24 studies analyzed under the theme Relatedness for this habitat reported how strains or nucleic acid sequences were sampled. In the case of microorganisms from foods and for plant-pathogenic or epiphytic bacteria, no studies involved the direct isolation of nucleic acid sequences from the environment. About 70% of the studies under this theme for each of these two habitats were based on strains from collections. The few descriptions of sampling strategies reported for these two habitats addressed the isolation of strains via culture-dependent methods expressly for the studies concerned.
For studies under the theme Relatedness based on the analysis of culturable strains, we could not identify a general logic to the number of strains used. These studies were based on analyses of samples ranging from fewer than 10 strains to several hundred strains. Furthermore, although most studies sought to represent a wide range of different groups or types of microorganisms among the strains analyzed, the number of strains chosen to represent each group was highly variable. It is likely that the number of strains employed for each predefined group is limited by the number of such strains that are available, particularly when the strains originate from culture collections. However, we never found a discussion or other justification regarding this subject.
Although it is quite obvious that sample size can have an effect on the results of quantitative studies, we feel that the importance of sample size for the results of descriptive studies, such as those concerning taxonomy, should not be overlooked. As mentioned above, we were intrigued by the unbalanced representation of different taxa in studies under the theme Relatedness. In general, the principal taxa studied were represented by numerous strains and the reference taxa were represented by only a few or single strains. The numerical techniques used for the creation of dendrograms are generally robust and little affected by the number of strains per cluster or taxon. However, if clusters or taxa are represented by unequal numbers of strains, then the variabilities within the populations corresponding to each of these taxa are not estimated with the same precision. In other words, if only a few strains are selected to represent one taxonomic unit and many strains are selected to represent another, then the potential variability within each of these taxa cannot be equally accounted for in numerical analysis. Hence, we feel that there is a need for reflection on how the degree of variability accorded to a taxon affects the estimation of its relatedness to other taxa.
Evaluating Methods for Studying Microbial Biodiversity
As mentioned above, nearly all of the publications addressing
the evaluation of methods for studying microbial biodiversity
(theme
Methods) focused on evaluating laboratory methods for
characterizing microorganisms or their DNA. Nevertheless, we
could distinguish between methods that were evaluated based
on environmental samples and those that were evaluated based
on strains from collections. For the former, we noted whether
multiple independent samples were employed in the study, and
for the latter, we noted whether an independent collection of
strains was used to validate the method (Fig.
2). Among the
94 publications analyzed under this theme, 85% were based on
environmental samples (aliquots of water or soil, for example)
and the remainder were based on strains from collections to
evaluate methods of characterization. For the studies employing
environmental samples, about 75% exploited multiple samples
as the basis for evaluating the method. In the other 25% of
studies, the evaluation of the method was based on only a single
environmental sample. None of the studies employing strains
from laboratories or national collections validated their conclusion
with results from a second independent collection of strains.
In some cases, independent collections have been combined to
determine the genetic diversity within a given species. Tamplin
et al. (
259) used two laboratory collections (53 environmental
and 78 clinical isolates) to determine the genetic variability
within
Vibrio vulnificus.
Discovering New Species and Other Taxa
Of all of the different themes analyzed here, the discovery
of new species or other new taxa of microorganisms (theme
New)
is particularly dependent on conceptual and technological advances
(
113,
223). Many of the publications under this theme seek to
demonstrate the pertinence of these advances by illustrating
how they contribute to the elucidation of new groups of microorganisms.
Nevertheless, in the search for new groups of microorganisms,
experimental design sets the stage for encountering the new
organisms. These discoveries are essential to understanding
the richness of the microbial world and may open doors to subsequent
studies of new microbial processes and of the impact of these
microorganisms on ecosystem functions. Hence, in light of this
potential impact, our analysis of experimental design for the
theme
New consisted of noting if the discovery was corroborated
by using additional independent samples from environments that
were the same as or similar to those of the original sample.
Of the 28 publications analyzed that addressed the theme New, 6 corroborated the discovery with multiple independent samples. Wright et al. (287) corroborated the discovery of a small-subunit rRNA (16S rRNA) gene lineage (SDAR324) that was initially discovered in the western Sargasso Sea. The corroboration was based on screening clone libraries prepared from the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans by using specific DNA probes. For rhizosphere and soil systems, Khbaya et al. (137) isolated bacteria from 6 sites, Kuske et al. (147) selected 5 independent rhizospheric samples, Wang et al. (281) sampled 11 plants at 2 sites, Coates et al. (43) processed samples from 8 environments, and Lloyd-Jones et al. (161) took samples from 10 different soils to corroborate their discoveries. The other 22 publications reported discoveries based on a single sample.

CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
The study of biodiversity is motivated by interest in the heterogeneity
and variability of organisms. Because of the immense number
of microorganisms on Earth and the wide range of habitats they
occupy, the potential heterogeneity and variability of microorganisms
are probably larger than for any other group of organisms. Microbiologists
are well aware of this potential. Nevertheless, the trends illustrated
in this review suggest that the field of microbial biodiversity
has lost sight of the full meaning of heterogeneity and variability
and has not dealt with some of their consequences on experimentation.
We have pointed out what we consider to be some of the particular
weaknesses of microbial biodiversity publications in this regard:
(i) that descriptions of sampling strategies or other information
concerning the representativeness of the sample are often missing
from publications, (ii) that there is very limited use of nonsubjective
tests (statistical tests) of hypotheses, and (iii) that only
a very few papers report the results of multiple independent
tests of hypotheses. Furthermore, there are very few examples
of publications addressing methodological questions about how
sampling strategies influence the results of microbial biodiversity
studies.
The analysis presented here is based on information contained in publicationsthe visible face of microbial biodiversity studies. In considering the factors contributing to the criticisms that we have evoked, one must keep in mind all facets of the production of publications. These facets include the conception of studies, experimentation, and elaboration of the publications. The availability of relevant information concerning sources of variability and the appropriate experimental design and statistical tests are likely to have an important influence on how the study is conceived. Furthermore, the costs associated with sampling and laboratory tests are likely to influence how extensively a study is conducted. Finally, in the elaboration of publications, reviewers and journal editors can have important impacts on contents. We need to ask what role they might play in the extent to which information concerning sampling, for example, is presented or in the orientation of Discussion sections.
In light of the vast sources of variability that need to be considered in studies of microbial biodiversity, one is likely to ask if such studies are, in fact, insurmountable tasks. As Kinkel et al. (139) suggest, certain hypotheses concerning microbial biodiversity may be very difficult to test due to problems of sampling inherent to many microbial systems. The task for microbial ecologists is to identify testable hypotheses relative to the sources of variability that can be accounted for in measures of biodiversity. At present, little headway has been made in apprehending the sources of variability in measures of microbial biodiversity. Furthermore, investigations into variability will also need to address the issue of scale. For example, in studies of the microbial biodiversity of soils and waters, there may be remarkable biodiversity at the scale of small aggregates that is not revealed at the scale of large clumps, as illustrated by the work of Grundmann and Normand (88) and of Long and Azam (162). The increasing availability of automation in analysis, particularly for DNA-based characterization, may help in exploring sources of variability.
Obviously, there is no unifying experimental strategy to account for sources of variability that is applicable to all themes and microbial habitats. Neither are there specific recommendations for samples of adequate size or for indices that are the most appropriate and that can be applied across the spectrum of themes and habitats addressed in microbial biodiversity. Biometricians and statisticians have an important role to play in helping microbiologists explore and define the experimental design and sampling strategies that are best adapted to the objectives of their studies. On the other hand, we feel that the presentation of certain basic information in microbial biodiversity publications, as described in Table 9, would contribute greatly to the rigor of these publications and to appreciation of the significance of the results with regard to underlying variability.
Materials and Methods sections should contain information necessary
for evaluating the representativeness of samples. In all cases,
this should include specific details about the origins of the
microorganisms or nucleic acids characterized and about the
criteria used by the authors in determining the number of individuals
characterized (Table
9). For studies evoking explicit hypotheses,
such as for the themes
Effect,
Dynamics, and
Source, estimates
of the variability of quantitative measures of diversity form
one approach to evaluating representativeness. For these themes,
we do not feel that representativeness needs to be further examined
if experimental design and statistical tests are employed as
indicated in Table
9. For studies under the themes
Describe,
Relatedness,
Markers, and
New, where quantitative measures of
diversity and statistical comparisons of populations are not
employed, it is important to provide other measures of representativeness
(Table
9). Ultimately, these studies can contribute to revealing
the biodiversity of total populations or communities. Hence,
representativeness is a key issue for these themes. Clearly,
almost all authors could state the evident fact that "this study
is not exhaustive and could be improved by taking more samples."
However, some daring authors might state that "this study is
just a shot in the dark to see what we would find." Such honest
testaments would put the conclusions of the work into perspective
and might also lead authors to revise their approach.
The Results sections should report means and variances of quantitative measures of diversity, where appropriate, or other measures of the repeatability of results. Statistical tests should be employed to test the hypotheses explicitly evoked in studies under the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source or when evoked for other types of studies such as evaluation of the impact of experimental design and sampling strategies on measures of biodiversity (theme Methods). Estimates of the representativeness of samples should be presented for themes Describe, Relatedness, Markers, and New, as described in the respective Materials and Methods sections (Table 9). The body of information presented in the Materials and Methods and the Results sections should provide the foundation for authors to evoke, in the Discussion section, the impact of sampling biases on their observations and to provide sufficient evidence that their observations are not due to random error. Although random error can have an important impact on the results of studies for all the themes we have described, under certain conditions its role could be ignored without greatly influencing the validity of the results (Table 9). For example, a new microbial species is still new even if we do not know the role of random error in its discovery. However, without information about the role of random error, one cannot speculate on the relative frequency of this species in the environment. Likewise, the efficiency or discriminating power of a characterization method can be evaluated without knowing the role of random error when selecting samples used for the evaluation. However, without knowing this role, it would be difficult to extrapolate the properties of the methods to other samples.
Ultimately, the Discussion section should state the significance of the results relative to microbial biodiversity. For the themes Effect, Dynamics, and Source, this should lead to an unambiguous appraisal of the validity of the principal hypotheses used by the authors. Implicit in the guidelines presented in Table 9 is that the objectives and specific hypotheses of studies are clearly stated in publications. The pertinence of experimental design and sampling strategies presented in the Materials and Methods section, of the analyses presented in the Results section and of the focus of the Discussion section fundamentally depends on the objectives.
Application of the guidelines presented in Table 9 when defining protocols and writing and reviewing manuscripts could boost the field of microbial biodiversity into a more active investigation of how experimental design and sampling strategies influence the results of microbial biodiversity studies. These investigations could include the develpoment of models to evaluate the impact of different sources of variability and sample size on the power of statistical tests, thus allowing optimization of the sample size and other parameters of experimental design relative to constraints of labor and cost. The past 25 years of research in microbial biodiversity has contributed greatly to the development of methods for characterizing the multiple facets of the richness of the microbial world. One of the intentions of this review is to prompt research in the upcoming decades toward unambiguous evaluations of the impact of this richness on ecological processes in microbial habitats.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the French Network for Microbial Biodiversity and Ecology,
funded by the CNRS and coordinated by Jacques Balandreau of
the CNRS Laboratory of Soil Microbial Ecology in Lyon, France,
for prompting us to establish a working group on sampling strategies
in microbial diversity and for subsidizing our meetings. We
also thank J. Balandreau for help in establishing the soil ecosystem
database, and we thank Philippe Prior, Joël Chadoeuf, and
Rachid Senoussi of INRA-Avignon, Jean-Claude Pierrat of INRA-Nancy,
and J. Balandreau for critical discussions. For assistance with
bibliographic research, we thank Marie-France Cornic and Michelle
Fies of INRA-Avignon and Sylvie Cocaud of INRA-Nancy.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Station de Pathologie Végétale, INRA, BP 94, 84140 Montfavet, France. Phone: (33) 432-72-28-86. Fax: (33) 432-72-28-42. E-mail:
morris{at}avignon.inra.fr.


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Microbiology and Molecular Biology Reviews, December 2002, p. 592-616, Vol. 66, No. 4
1092-2172/02/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/MMBR.66.4.592-616.2002
Copyright © 2002, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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