Fossilized giant sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria from the Devonian Hollard Mound seep deposit, Morocco

Author:

Smrzka Daniel12,Zwicker Jennifer3,Schulz‐Vogt Heide4,Little Crispin T. S.56,Rieder Max7,Meister Patrick8,Gier Susanne8,Peckmann Jörn9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Geosciences Universität Bremen Bremen Germany

2. MARUM Center for Marine and Environmental Sciences Bremen Germany

3. Institute for Mineralogy und Crystallography Universität Wien Wien Austria

4. Leibniz Institute for Baltic Sea Research Warnemünde (IOW) Rostock Germany

5. School of Earth and Environment University of Leeds Leeds UK

6. Life Sciences Department Natural History Museum London UK

7. Geologie Weixelberger Pitten Austria

8. Department of Geology Universität Wien Wien Austria

9. Institute for Geology, Center for Earth System Research and Sustainability Universität Hamburg Hamburg Germany

Abstract

AbstractThe giant sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria are particularly prone to preservation in the rock record, and their fossils have been identified in ancient phosphorites, cherts, and carbonates. This study reports putative spherical fossils preserved in the Devonian Hollard Mound hydrocarbon‐seep deposit. Based on petrographical, mineralogical, and geochemical evidence the putative microfossils are interpreted as sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria similar to the present‐day genus Thiomargarita, which is also found at modern hydrocarbon seeps. The morphology, distribution, size, and occurrence of the fossilized cells show a large degree of similarity to their modern counterparts. Some of the spherical fossils adhere to worm tubes analogous to the occurrence of modern Thiomargarita on the tubes of seep‐dwelling siboglinid worms. Fluorapatite crystals were identified within the fossilized cell walls, suggesting the intercellular storage of phosphorus analogous to modern Thiomargarita cells. The preservation of large sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria was probably linked to changing biogeochemical processes at the Hollard Mound seep or, alternatively, may have been favored by the sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria performing nitrate‐dependent sulfide oxidation—a process known to induce carbonate precipitation. The presence of sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria at a Devonian hydrocarbon seep highlights the similarities of past and present chemosynthesis‐based ecosystems and provides valuable insight into the antiquity of biogeochemical processes and element cycling at Phanerozoic seeps.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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