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Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA

Subsurface habitats harbor novel diversity that has received little attention until recently. Accessible subsurface habitats include lava caves around the world that often support extensive microbial mats on ceilings and walls in a range of colors. Little is known about lava cave microbial diversity...

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Autores principales: Lavoie, Kathleen H., Winter, Ara S., Read, Kaitlyn J. H., Hughes, Evan M., Spilde, Michael N., Northup, Diana E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5310854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28199330
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169339
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author Lavoie, Kathleen H.
Winter, Ara S.
Read, Kaitlyn J. H.
Hughes, Evan M.
Spilde, Michael N.
Northup, Diana E.
author_facet Lavoie, Kathleen H.
Winter, Ara S.
Read, Kaitlyn J. H.
Hughes, Evan M.
Spilde, Michael N.
Northup, Diana E.
author_sort Lavoie, Kathleen H.
collection PubMed
description Subsurface habitats harbor novel diversity that has received little attention until recently. Accessible subsurface habitats include lava caves around the world that often support extensive microbial mats on ceilings and walls in a range of colors. Little is known about lava cave microbial diversity and how these subsurface mats differ from microbial communities in overlying surface soils. To investigate these differences, we analyzed bacterial 16S rDNA from 454 pyrosequencing from three colors of microbial mats (tan, white, and yellow) from seven lava caves in Lava Beds National Monument, CA, USA, and compared them with surface soil overlying each cave. The same phyla were represented in both surface soils and cave microbial mats, but the overlap in shared OTUs (operational taxonomic unit) was only 11.2%. Number of entrances per cave and temperature contributed to observed differences in diversity. In terms of species richness, diversity by mat color differed, but not significantly. Actinobacteria dominated in all cave samples, with 39% from caves and 21% from surface soils. Proteobacteria made up 30% of phyla from caves and 36% from surface soil. Other major phyla in caves were Nitrospirae (7%) followed by minor phyla (7%), compared to surface soils with Bacteroidetes (8%) and minor phyla (8%). Many of the most abundant sequences could not be identified to genus, indicating a high degree of novelty. Surface soil samples had more OTUs and greater diversity indices than cave samples. Although surface soil microbes immigrate into underlying caves, the environment selects for microbes able to live in the cave habitats, resulting in very different cave microbial communities. This study is the first comprehensive comparison of bacterial communities in lava caves with the overlying soil community.
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spelling pubmed-53108542017-03-03 Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA Lavoie, Kathleen H. Winter, Ara S. Read, Kaitlyn J. H. Hughes, Evan M. Spilde, Michael N. Northup, Diana E. PLoS One Research Article Subsurface habitats harbor novel diversity that has received little attention until recently. Accessible subsurface habitats include lava caves around the world that often support extensive microbial mats on ceilings and walls in a range of colors. Little is known about lava cave microbial diversity and how these subsurface mats differ from microbial communities in overlying surface soils. To investigate these differences, we analyzed bacterial 16S rDNA from 454 pyrosequencing from three colors of microbial mats (tan, white, and yellow) from seven lava caves in Lava Beds National Monument, CA, USA, and compared them with surface soil overlying each cave. The same phyla were represented in both surface soils and cave microbial mats, but the overlap in shared OTUs (operational taxonomic unit) was only 11.2%. Number of entrances per cave and temperature contributed to observed differences in diversity. In terms of species richness, diversity by mat color differed, but not significantly. Actinobacteria dominated in all cave samples, with 39% from caves and 21% from surface soils. Proteobacteria made up 30% of phyla from caves and 36% from surface soil. Other major phyla in caves were Nitrospirae (7%) followed by minor phyla (7%), compared to surface soils with Bacteroidetes (8%) and minor phyla (8%). Many of the most abundant sequences could not be identified to genus, indicating a high degree of novelty. Surface soil samples had more OTUs and greater diversity indices than cave samples. Although surface soil microbes immigrate into underlying caves, the environment selects for microbes able to live in the cave habitats, resulting in very different cave microbial communities. This study is the first comprehensive comparison of bacterial communities in lava caves with the overlying soil community. Public Library of Science 2017-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC5310854/ /pubmed/28199330 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169339 Text en © 2017 Lavoie et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lavoie, Kathleen H.
Winter, Ara S.
Read, Kaitlyn J. H.
Hughes, Evan M.
Spilde, Michael N.
Northup, Diana E.
Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA
title Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA
title_full Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA
title_fullStr Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA
title_short Comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from Lava Beds National Monument, USA
title_sort comparison of bacterial communities from lava cave microbial mats to overlying surface soils from lava beds national monument, usa
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5310854/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28199330
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0169339
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