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Microbial Community Structure and the Persistence of Cyanobacterial Populations in Salt Crusts of the Hyperarid Atacama Desert from Genome-Resolved Metagenomics.

Authors :
Finstad, Kari M
Finstad, Kari M
Probst, Alexander J
Thomas, Brian C
Andersen, Gary L
Demergasso, Cecilia
Echeverría, Alex
Amundson, Ronald G
Banfield, Jillian F
Finstad, Kari M
Finstad, Kari M
Probst, Alexander J
Thomas, Brian C
Andersen, Gary L
Demergasso, Cecilia
Echeverría, Alex
Amundson, Ronald G
Banfield, Jillian F
Source :
Frontiers in microbiology; vol 8, iss JUL, 1435; 1664-302X
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Although once thought to be devoid of biology, recent studies have identified salt deposits as oases for life in the hyperarid Atacama Desert. To examine spatial patterns of microbial species and key nutrient sources, we genomically characterized 26 salt crusts from three sites along a fog gradient. The communities are dominated by a large variety of Halobacteriales and Bacteroidetes, plus a few algal and Cyanobacterial species. CRISPR locus analysis suggests the distribution of a single Cyanobacterial population among all sites. This is in stark contrast to the extremely high sample specificity of most other community members. Only present at the highest moisture site is a genomically characterized Thermoplasmatales archaeon (Marine Group II) and six Nanohaloarchaea, one of which is represented by a complete genome. Parcubacteria (OD1) and Saccharibacteria (TM7), not previously reported from hypersaline environments, were found at low abundances. We found no indication of a N2 fixation pathway in the communities, suggesting acquisition of bioavailable nitrogen from atmospherically derived nitrate. Samples cluster by site based on bacterial and archaeal abundance patterns and photosynthetic capacity decreases with increasing distance from the ocean. We conclude that moisture level, controlled by coastal fog intensity, is the strongest driver of community membership.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Frontiers in microbiology; vol 8, iss JUL, 1435; 1664-302X
Notes :
application/pdf, Frontiers in microbiology vol 8, iss JUL, 1435 1664-302X
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1367468402
Document Type :
Electronic Resource