Microbial Mat Communities along an Oxygen Gradient in a Perennially Ice-Covered Antarctic Lake

Author:

Jungblut Anne D.1,Hawes Ian2,Mackey Tyler J.3,Krusor Megan4,Doran Peter T.5,Sumner Dawn Y.3,Eisen Jonathan A.45,Hillman Colin2,Goroncy Alexander K.2

Affiliation:

1. Life Sciences Department, The Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom

2. University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

3. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USA

4. Microbiology Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USA

5. Department of Geology and Geophysics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA

Abstract

ABSTRACT Lake Fryxell is a perennially ice-covered lake in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica, with a sharp oxycline in a water column that is density stabilized by a gradient in salt concentration. Dissolved oxygen falls from 20 mg liter −1 to undetectable over one vertical meter from 8.9- to 9.9-m depth. We provide the first description of the benthic mat community that falls within this oxygen gradient on the sloping floor of the lake, using a combination of micro- and macroscopic morphological descriptions, pigment analysis, and 16S rRNA gene bacterial community analysis. Our work focused on three macroscopic mat morphologies that were associated with different parts of the oxygen gradient: (i) “cuspate pinnacles” in the upper hyperoxic zone, which displayed complex topography and were dominated by phycoerythrin-rich cyanobacteria attributable to the genus Leptolyngbya and a diverse but sparse assemblage of pennate diatoms; (ii) a less topographically complex “ridge-pit” mat located immediately above the oxic-anoxic transition containing Leptolyngbya and an increasing abundance of diatoms; and (iii) flat prostrate mats in the upper anoxic zone, dominated by a green cyanobacterium phylogenetically identified as Phormidium pseudopriestleyi and a single diatom, Diadesmis contenta . Zonation of bacteria was by lake depth and by depth into individual mats. Deeper mats had higher abundances of bacteriochlorophylls and anoxygenic phototrophs, including Chlorobi and Chloroflexi . This suggests that microbial communities form assemblages specific to niche-like locations. Mat morphologies, underpinned by cyanobacterial and diatom composition, are the result of local habitat conditions likely defined by irradiance and oxygen and sulfide concentrations.

Funder

NSF

NASA

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference72 articles.

1. Carbon Transformations in a Perennially Ice-Covered Antarctic Lake

2. Spigel RH, Priscu JC. 1998. Physical limnology of the McMurdo Dry Valley lakes, p 153–189. In Priscu JC (ed), Ecosystem dynamics in a polar desert: the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. American Geophysical Union, Washington, DC.

3. Nitrous oxide cycling in Lake Vanda, Antarctica

4. Protist diversity in a permanently ice-covered Antarctic Lake during the polar night transition

5. The cycling of nutrients in a closed-basin antarctic lake: Lake Vanda

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