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Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog

Prior observations suggest that foraminiferan protists use their reticulopodia (anastomosing pseudopodia) to alter sediment fabric by disrupting laminations of subtidal marine stromatolites, erasing the layered structures in an experimental setting. Because microbialites and foraminifera are found i...

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Autores principales: Bernhard, Joan M., Fisher, Luke A., Murphy, Quinne, Sen, Leena, Yeh, Heidi D., Louyakis, Artemis, Gomaa, Fatma, Reilly, Megan, Batta-Lona, Paola G., Bucklin, Ann, Le Roux, Veronique, Visscher, Pieter T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10642914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37965561
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1210781
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author Bernhard, Joan M.
Fisher, Luke A.
Murphy, Quinne
Sen, Leena
Yeh, Heidi D.
Louyakis, Artemis
Gomaa, Fatma
Reilly, Megan
Batta-Lona, Paola G.
Bucklin, Ann
Le Roux, Veronique
Visscher, Pieter T.
author_facet Bernhard, Joan M.
Fisher, Luke A.
Murphy, Quinne
Sen, Leena
Yeh, Heidi D.
Louyakis, Artemis
Gomaa, Fatma
Reilly, Megan
Batta-Lona, Paola G.
Bucklin, Ann
Le Roux, Veronique
Visscher, Pieter T.
author_sort Bernhard, Joan M.
collection PubMed
description Prior observations suggest that foraminiferan protists use their reticulopodia (anastomosing pseudopodia) to alter sediment fabric by disrupting laminations of subtidal marine stromatolites, erasing the layered structures in an experimental setting. Because microbialites and foraminifera are found in non-marine settings, we hypothesized that foraminifera living in lakes could also disrupt layered microbialite fabric. With this aim and using a variety of multidisciplinary approaches, we conducted field surveys and an experiment on microbialites from Green Lake (GL; Fayetteville, New York State, United States), which has been studied as a Proterozoic ecosystem analog. The lake is meromictic and alkaline, receiving calcium sulfate-rich water in the monimolimnion; it supports a well-developed carbonate platform that provides access to living and relict microbialites. The living microbialites grow from early spring to autumn, forming a laminated mat at their surface (top ~5 mm), but a clotted or massive structure exists at depth (> ~ 1 cm). We observed a morphotype of “naked” foraminiferan-like protist in samples from GL microbialites and sediments; thus, considered the possibility of freshwater foraminiferan impact on microbialite fabric. Results of an experiment that seeded the cultured freshwater foraminifer Haplomyxa saranae onto the GL microbialite surface indicates via micro-CT scanning and anisotropy analysis that the introduced foraminifer impacted uppermost microbialite layering (n = 3 cores); those cores with an added inhibitor lacked changes in anisotropy for two of those three cores. Thus, it remains plausible that the much smaller, relatively common, native free-form reticulate protist, which we identified as Chlamydomyxa labyrinthuloides, can disrupt microbialite fabrics on sub-millimeter scales. Our observations do not exclude contributions of other possible causal factors.
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spelling pubmed-106429142023-11-14 Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog Bernhard, Joan M. Fisher, Luke A. Murphy, Quinne Sen, Leena Yeh, Heidi D. Louyakis, Artemis Gomaa, Fatma Reilly, Megan Batta-Lona, Paola G. Bucklin, Ann Le Roux, Veronique Visscher, Pieter T. Front Microbiol Microbiology Prior observations suggest that foraminiferan protists use their reticulopodia (anastomosing pseudopodia) to alter sediment fabric by disrupting laminations of subtidal marine stromatolites, erasing the layered structures in an experimental setting. Because microbialites and foraminifera are found in non-marine settings, we hypothesized that foraminifera living in lakes could also disrupt layered microbialite fabric. With this aim and using a variety of multidisciplinary approaches, we conducted field surveys and an experiment on microbialites from Green Lake (GL; Fayetteville, New York State, United States), which has been studied as a Proterozoic ecosystem analog. The lake is meromictic and alkaline, receiving calcium sulfate-rich water in the monimolimnion; it supports a well-developed carbonate platform that provides access to living and relict microbialites. The living microbialites grow from early spring to autumn, forming a laminated mat at their surface (top ~5 mm), but a clotted or massive structure exists at depth (> ~ 1 cm). We observed a morphotype of “naked” foraminiferan-like protist in samples from GL microbialites and sediments; thus, considered the possibility of freshwater foraminiferan impact on microbialite fabric. Results of an experiment that seeded the cultured freshwater foraminifer Haplomyxa saranae onto the GL microbialite surface indicates via micro-CT scanning and anisotropy analysis that the introduced foraminifer impacted uppermost microbialite layering (n = 3 cores); those cores with an added inhibitor lacked changes in anisotropy for two of those three cores. Thus, it remains plausible that the much smaller, relatively common, native free-form reticulate protist, which we identified as Chlamydomyxa labyrinthuloides, can disrupt microbialite fabrics on sub-millimeter scales. Our observations do not exclude contributions of other possible causal factors. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-10-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10642914/ /pubmed/37965561 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1210781 Text en Copyright © 2023 Bernhard, Fisher, Murphy, Sen, Yeh, Louyakis, Gomaa, Reilly, Batta-Lona, Bucklin, Le Roux and Visscher. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Microbiology
Bernhard, Joan M.
Fisher, Luke A.
Murphy, Quinne
Sen, Leena
Yeh, Heidi D.
Louyakis, Artemis
Gomaa, Fatma
Reilly, Megan
Batta-Lona, Paola G.
Bucklin, Ann
Le Roux, Veronique
Visscher, Pieter T.
Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog
title Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog
title_full Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog
title_fullStr Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog
title_full_unstemmed Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog
title_short Transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a Proterozoic ecosystem analog
title_sort transition from stromatolite to thrombolite fabric: potential role for reticulopodial protists in lake microbialites of a proterozoic ecosystem analog
topic Microbiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10642914/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37965561
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1210781
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