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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/33557
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Title: | Prokaryotic communities from a lava tube cave in La Palma Island (Spain) are involved in the biogeochemical cycle of major elements |
Authors: | Gonzalez-Pimentel, J Martin-Pozas, T Jurado, V Miller, A Caldeira, A T Fernandez-Lorenzo Sanchez-Moral, S Saiz-Jimenez, C |
Keywords: | Lava tube Biogeochemical cycles |
Issue Date: | 2021 |
Citation: | Gonzalez-Pimentel JL, Martin-Pozas T, Jurado V, Miller AZ, Caldeira AT, Fernandez-Lorenzo O, Sanchez-Moral S, Saiz-Jimenez C.2021. Prokaryotic communities from a lava tube cave in La Palma Island (Spain) are involved in the biogeochemical cycle of major elements.PeerJ 9:e11386 https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11386 |
Abstract: | Lava caves differ from karstic caves in their genesis and mineral composition. Subsurface
microbiology of lava tube caves in Canary Islands, a volcanic archipelago in the Atlantic
Ocean, is largely unknown. We have focused the investigation in a representative
lava tube cave, Fuente de la Canaria Cave, in La Palma Island, Spain, which presents
different types of speleothems and colored microbial mats. Four samples collected
in this cave were studied using DNA next-generation sequencing and field emission
scanning electron microscopy for bacterial identification, functional profiling, and
morphological characterization. The data showed an almost exclusive dominance of
Bacteria over Archaea. The distribution in phyla revealed a majority abundance of
Proteobacteria (37–89%), followed by Actinobacteria, Acidobacteria and Candidatus
Rokubacteria. These four phyla comprised a total relative abundance of 72–96%. The
main ecological functions in the microbial communities were chemoheterotrophy,
methanotrophy, sulfur and nitrogen metabolisms, and CO2 fixation; although other
ecological functions were outlined. Genome annotations of the especially representative
taxon Ga0077536 (about 71% of abundance in moonmilk) predicted the presence
of genes involved in CO2 fixation, formaldehyde consumption, sulfur and nitrogen
metabolisms, and microbially-induced carbonate precipitation. The detection of several
putative lineages associated with C, N, S, Fe and Mn indicates that Fuente de la Canaria
Cave basalts are colonized by metabolically diverse prokaryotic communities involved
in the biogeochemical cycling of major elements. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/33557 |
Type: | article |
Appears in Collections: | HERCULES - Publicações - Artigos em Revistas Internacionais Com Arbitragem Científica
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