Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils
Carbon-fixation is a critical process in severely oligotrophic Antarctic Dry Valley (DV) soils and may represent the major source of carbon in these arid environments. However, rates of C-fixation in DVs are currently unknown and the microorganisms responsible for these activities unidentified. In...
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doaj-a6c2ec1ac0eb4e018db0071dd19edcbb2020-11-25T00:34:20ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Microbiology1664-302X2015-12-01610.3389/fmicb.2015.01347153561Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soilsThomas eNiederberger0Jill A. Sohm1Troy eGunderson2Joëlle eTirindelli3Douglas G Capone4Edward J. Carpenter5Craig Stephen Cary6Craig Stephen Cary7Craig Stephen Cary8University of DelawareUniversity of Southern CaliforniaUniversity of Southern CaliforniaSan Francisco State UniversityUniversity of Southern CaliforniaSan Francisco State UniversityUniversity of DelawareInternational Centre for Terrestrial Antarctic ResearchUniversity of WaikatoCarbon-fixation is a critical process in severely oligotrophic Antarctic Dry Valley (DV) soils and may represent the major source of carbon in these arid environments. However, rates of C-fixation in DVs are currently unknown and the microorganisms responsible for these activities unidentified. In this study, C-fixation rates measured in the bulk arid soils (<5% moisture) ranged from below detection limits to ~12 nmol C/cc/h. Rates in ephemerally wet soils ranged from ~20 to 750 nmol C/cc/h, equating to turnover rates of ~7 days to 140 days, with lower rates in stream-associated soils as compared to lake-associated soils. Sequencing of the large subunit of RuBisCO (cbbL) in these soils identified green-type sequences dominated by the 1B cyanobacterial-related phylotype in both arid and wet soils including the RNA fraction of the wet soil. Red-type cbbL genes were dominated by 1C actinobacterial phylotypes in arid soils, with wetted soils containing nearly equal proportions of 1C (actinobacterial and proteobacterial signatures) and 1D (algal) phylotypes. Complementary 16S rRNA and 18S rRNA gene sequencing also revealed distinct differences in community structure between biotopes. This study is the first of its kind to examine C-fixation rates in DV soils and the microorganisms potentially responsible for these activities.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2015.01347/fullmicrobial communitiesprimary productionCO2 fixationDry Valleys.Antarctic soils |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Thomas eNiederberger Jill A. Sohm Troy eGunderson Joëlle eTirindelli Douglas G Capone Edward J. Carpenter Craig Stephen Cary Craig Stephen Cary Craig Stephen Cary |
spellingShingle |
Thomas eNiederberger Jill A. Sohm Troy eGunderson Joëlle eTirindelli Douglas G Capone Edward J. Carpenter Craig Stephen Cary Craig Stephen Cary Craig Stephen Cary Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils Frontiers in Microbiology microbial communities primary production CO2 fixation Dry Valleys. Antarctic soils |
author_facet |
Thomas eNiederberger Jill A. Sohm Troy eGunderson Joëlle eTirindelli Douglas G Capone Edward J. Carpenter Craig Stephen Cary Craig Stephen Cary Craig Stephen Cary |
author_sort |
Thomas eNiederberger |
title |
Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils |
title_short |
Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils |
title_full |
Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils |
title_fullStr |
Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils |
title_full_unstemmed |
Carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet Antarctic Dry Valley soils |
title_sort |
carbon-fixation rates and associated microbial communities residing in arid and ephemerally wet antarctic dry valley soils |
publisher |
Frontiers Media S.A. |
series |
Frontiers in Microbiology |
issn |
1664-302X |
publishDate |
2015-12-01 |
description |
Carbon-fixation is a critical process in severely oligotrophic Antarctic Dry Valley (DV) soils and may represent the major source of carbon in these arid environments. However, rates of C-fixation in DVs are currently unknown and the microorganisms responsible for these activities unidentified. In this study, C-fixation rates measured in the bulk arid soils (<5% moisture) ranged from below detection limits to ~12 nmol C/cc/h. Rates in ephemerally wet soils ranged from ~20 to 750 nmol C/cc/h, equating to turnover rates of ~7 days to 140 days, with lower rates in stream-associated soils as compared to lake-associated soils. Sequencing of the large subunit of RuBisCO (cbbL) in these soils identified green-type sequences dominated by the 1B cyanobacterial-related phylotype in both arid and wet soils including the RNA fraction of the wet soil. Red-type cbbL genes were dominated by 1C actinobacterial phylotypes in arid soils, with wetted soils containing nearly equal proportions of 1C (actinobacterial and proteobacterial signatures) and 1D (algal) phylotypes. Complementary 16S rRNA and 18S rRNA gene sequencing also revealed distinct differences in community structure between biotopes. This study is the first of its kind to examine C-fixation rates in DV soils and the microorganisms potentially responsible for these activities. |
topic |
microbial communities primary production CO2 fixation Dry Valleys. Antarctic soils |
url |
http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fmicb.2015.01347/full |
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