bioRxiv preprint

Apparent generalism in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is underpinned by Convergent, Cryptic Specialization

Microbes that span environmental reservoirs and diverse human infections are often described as generalists or as ubiquitous, yet ecological theory predicts generalism should be unstable when specialists outperform within any one niche. Here we show that Pseudomonas aeruginosa's apparent ecological breadth reflects convergent, cryptic specialism (CCS) - repeatable, environment-linked genomic differentiation that is not confined to deep lineages - rather than strict specialism or generalism. An analysis of 6,627 genomes with source-environment metadata reveals that environments are broadly dispersed across the phylogeny, inconsistent with lineage-locked specialization. Despite this shallow ph

microbiology