Microbial iron cycling is prevalent in water-logged Alaskan Arctic tundra habitats, but sensitive to disturbance

Author:

Michaud Alexander B1ORCID,Massé Rémi O1,Emerson David1

Affiliation:

1. Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences , East Boothbay, ME 04544, United States

Abstract

Abstract Water logged habitats in continuous permafrost regions provide extensive oxic-anoxic interface habitats for iron cycling. The iron cycle interacts with the methane and phosphorus cycles, and is an important part of tundra biogeochemistry. Our objective was to characterize microbial communities associated with the iron cycle within natural and disturbed habitats of the Alaskan Arctic tundra. We sampled aquatic habitats within natural, undisturbed and anthropogenically disturbed areas and sequenced the 16S rRNA gene to describe the microbial communities, then supported these results with process rate and geochemical measurements. Undisturbed habitats have microbial communities that are significantly different than disturbed habitats. Microbial taxa known to participate in the iron and methane cycles are significantly associated with natural habitats, whereas they are not significantly associated with disturbed sites. Undisturbed habitats have significantly higher extractable iron and are more acidic than disturbed habitats sampled. Iron reduction is not measurable in disturbed aquatic habitats and is not stimulated by the addition of biogenic iron mats. Our study highlights the prevalence of Fe-cycling in undisturbed water-logged habitats, and demonstrates that anthropogenic disturbance of the tundra, due to legacy gravel mining, alters the microbiology of aquatic habitats and disrupts important biogeochemical cycles in the Arctic tundra.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Division of Environmental Biology

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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