Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Spatial and temporal variability in microbial mat communities from preand post-eruption Loihi Volcano: A microbial observatory for the study of neutrophilic iron-oxidizing bacteria Craig L. Moyer Biology Department Western Washington University Image courtesy of SOEST Loihi Seamount, Hawaii • Fe-dominated system • Recent eruption (1996) • Logistically easy access Images courtesy of MBARI 20 m contours SUMMARY OF THE 1996 ERUPTION AND SEISMIC EVENT • Loihi goes seismic, July & August 1996 • The largest swarm of earthquakes ever recorded on ANY Hawaiian volcano • There was at least one, possibly two eruptions based on dating of lavas recovered Pele’s Vents: 1993 Pele’s Pit: The Forbidden Vents 1996 Pele’s Pit: After the 1996 Seismic Event Fe-Dominated Vents 2004 • Higher temp/heat flux vents • Lower temp/heat flux vents • Fe(II) between 50 and 750 μM • Summit located in oxygen-minima zone (0.5 mg/l) Initial Questions: • Can we track changes in microbial mat community structure using T-RFLP in conjunction with other molecular methods? • What about spatial and temporal variability? • Are there key populations in the community triggered by environmental forcing functions that we can target? Integrating Molecular Methods • Terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphisms (T-RFLPs) were used to detect phylotypes within the community. • Clone library analyses were used to further identify these phylotypes. • Q-PCR is used to quantify key populations and/or groups within the community (future work). T-RFLP FLOWCHART Size is limited to 50-500 basepairs % of Populations Detected 100 Model Communities at Discrete Values of Richness % of populations detected UPGMA/product-moment cluster analysis of 55 T-RFLP bacterial community fingerprints. Community Tave=26°C Community Tave=103°C Representative T-RFLP electropherograms of Loihi Group 1 & 2 libraries. Phylogenetic grouping, closest neighbor, and nucleotide similarity of OTUs from the Loihi Group 1 sample PV602 b1-4. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were chosen based on 97% nucleotide similarity of aligned 5’ 300 base SSU rDNA fragments using the program DOTUR. Phylogenetic grouping, closest neighbor, and nucleotide similarity of OTUs from the Loihi Group 2 sample PV601 b1-8. Operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were chosen based on 97% nucleotide similarity of aligned 5’ 300 base SSU rDNA fragments using the program DOTUR. Microbial Mat Community Structure Phylogenetic groupings and the percent abundances of clones found in Loihi Group 1 and Group 2 SSU rDNA clone libraries. Rarefaction curves comparing the estimated population richness from three clone libraries generated from Loihi microbial mats. Richness is not significantly different between Loihi Group 1 and Loihi Group 2 libraries. Loihi Group 2 Community Loihi Group 1 Community Mn vs. Fe for all vent effluent samples taken from 1993 through 1997. Wheat et al., Continuous sampling fluids from Loihi, JGR, 2000. Butterfield Model: Hydrothermal Event Response Loihi Group 1 Community Loihi Group 2 Community • Loihi Group 1 is the largest group and containing the most mat samples collected over time. • Loihi Group 2 is comprised of only post-eruption communities. • Loihi Group 1 microbial mats are dominated by phylotypes related to the obligate lithotrophic Fe-oxidizing isolate ‘M. ferroxydans’. • Loihi Group 2 communities are dominated by a unique group of phylotypes belonging to the Nitrospira division and to H2-oxidizing ε-Proteobacteria. • Microbial mats clustering within Loihi Group 1 have also been discovered from iron dominated vent sites at the Mariana Arc and Backarc, and the Juan de Fuca Ridge. • Loihi Group 2 also contains phylotypes associated with Thiomicrospira spp., and the ‘M. ferroxydans’ group. PV-1 Filament Formation. Phase Contrast Epifluorescent composite ‘Mariprofundus ferroxydans’ Group ML Phylogenetic Tree Original marine e-Proteobacteria ML Phylogenetic Tree Updated e-Proteobacteria ML Phylogenetic Tree S-oxidizers? H-oxidizers? Summary • Loihi Group 1 microbial mats are generally from cooler (Tave=26ºC) vent sites than Loihi Group 2 microbial mats (Tave=103 ºC). May have more groups or subgroups….? • Loihi Group 2 consists of only post-eruption samples, most of which became dominated by Loihi Group 1 microbial mats as the hydrothermal vent fluids cooled over time. This suggests that the microbial community associated with Loihi Group 2 may be an ephemeral assemblage which becomes dominant only under the most extreme post-eruption conditions. • Loihi Group 1 and Loihi Group 2 microbial mats are not significantly different in terms of species richness, but are significantly different in terms of species composition when calculated using the integral form of the Cramer-von Mises statistic using the program -Libshuff (Schloss et al., 2004). Summary (cont.) • Loihi Group 1 microbial mats are dominated by neutrophilic Feoxidizing bacteria clustering within the ‘Mariprofundus ferroxidans’ Group (e.g., novel z-Proteobacteria). • Loihi Group 2 microbial mats are co-dominated by neutrophilic Fe-oxidizing bacteria clustering within the ‘Mariprofundus ferroxidans’ Group, putative sulphate-reducing nitrifiers (e.g., Nitrospira), as well as hydrogen- and sulfur-oxidizing e- and gProteobacteria. • Loihi Group 1 (before and after event) mats are dominated by metabolisms (e.g., Fe-oxidizing) associated with brine dominated vent effluents and do not contain any sulfur-cycling or hydrogenoxidizing bacterial phylotypes. • Loihi Group 2 (post-eruption only) mats contain metabolisms associated with both brine and gas dominated vent effluents. Acknowledgements Funding: NSF, NOAA, BFR Capt. & Crew of R/V KOK Terry Kerby & HURL Team Loihi Collaborators: Geoff Wheat (UofAK) Frank Sansone (UofHI) FeMO Collaborators: Dave Emerson (ATCC) Katrina Edwards (WHOI) Hubert Staudigal (SIO) Brad Tebo (OHSU) Moyer Lab Graduate Students: Richard Davis Andrea Curtis Leslie Chao Racheal Zack Undergrad Researchers: Deborah Whitley James Yang Angela Olson REU Interns Summer 2005 Travis Carney Kelsey Leal UPGMA/product-moment cluster analysis of 55 T-RFLP bacterial community fingerprints. Community Tave=26°C ??? Community Tave=103°C Possible Loihi Community Group 3??? Dominated by sulfur-oxidizing e-Proteobacteria ‘Mariprofundus ferroxydans’ Group ML Phylogenetic Tree Nitrospira ML Phylogenetic Tree