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Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California

Mono Lake is a closed‐basin, hypersaline, alkaline lake located in Eastern Sierra Nevada, California, that is dominated by microbial life. This unique ecosystem offers a natural laboratory for probing microbial community responses to environmental change. In 2017, a heavy snowpack and subsequent run...

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Autores principales: Phillips, Alexandra A., Speth, Daan R., Miller, Laurence G., Wang, Xingchen T., Wu, Fenfang, Medeiros, Patricia M., Monteverde, Danielle R., Osburn, Magdalena R., Berelson, William M., Betts, Hannah L., Wijker, Reto S., Mullin, Sean W., Johnson, Hope A., Orphan, Victoria J., Fischer, Woodward W., Sessions, Alex L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8359280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33629529
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12437
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author Phillips, Alexandra A.
Speth, Daan R.
Miller, Laurence G.
Wang, Xingchen T.
Wu, Fenfang
Medeiros, Patricia M.
Monteverde, Danielle R.
Osburn, Magdalena R.
Berelson, William M.
Betts, Hannah L.
Wijker, Reto S.
Mullin, Sean W.
Johnson, Hope A.
Orphan, Victoria J.
Fischer, Woodward W.
Sessions, Alex L.
author_facet Phillips, Alexandra A.
Speth, Daan R.
Miller, Laurence G.
Wang, Xingchen T.
Wu, Fenfang
Medeiros, Patricia M.
Monteverde, Danielle R.
Osburn, Magdalena R.
Berelson, William M.
Betts, Hannah L.
Wijker, Reto S.
Mullin, Sean W.
Johnson, Hope A.
Orphan, Victoria J.
Fischer, Woodward W.
Sessions, Alex L.
author_sort Phillips, Alexandra A.
collection PubMed
description Mono Lake is a closed‐basin, hypersaline, alkaline lake located in Eastern Sierra Nevada, California, that is dominated by microbial life. This unique ecosystem offers a natural laboratory for probing microbial community responses to environmental change. In 2017, a heavy snowpack and subsequent runoff led Mono Lake to transition from annually mixed (monomictic) to indefinitely stratified (meromictic). We followed microbial succession during this limnological shift, establishing a two‐year (2017–2018) water‐column time series of geochemical and microbiological data. Following meromictic conditions, anoxia persisted below the chemocline and reduced compounds such as sulfide and ammonium increased in concentration from near 0 to ~400 and ~150 µM, respectively, throughout 2018. We observed significant microbial succession, with trends varying by water depth. In the epilimnion (above the chemocline), aerobic heterotrophs were displaced by phototrophic genera when a large bloom of cyanobacteria appeared in fall 2018. Bacteria in the hypolimnion (below the chemocline) had a delayed, but systematic, response reflecting colonization by sediment “seed bank” communities. Phototrophic sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria appeared first in summer 2017, followed by microbes associated with anaerobic fermentation in spring 2018, and eventually sulfate‐reducing taxa by fall 2018. This slow shift indicated that multi‐year meromixis was required to establish a sulfate‐reducing community in Mono Lake, although sulfide oxidizers thrive throughout mixing regimes. The abundant green alga Picocystis remained the dominant primary producer during the meromixis event, abundant throughout the water column including in the hypolimnion despite the absence of light and prevalence of sulfide. Our study adds to the growing literature describing microbial resistance and resilience during lake mixing events related to climatic events and environmental change.
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spelling pubmed-83592802021-08-17 Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California Phillips, Alexandra A. Speth, Daan R. Miller, Laurence G. Wang, Xingchen T. Wu, Fenfang Medeiros, Patricia M. Monteverde, Danielle R. Osburn, Magdalena R. Berelson, William M. Betts, Hannah L. Wijker, Reto S. Mullin, Sean W. Johnson, Hope A. Orphan, Victoria J. Fischer, Woodward W. Sessions, Alex L. Geobiology Original Articles Mono Lake is a closed‐basin, hypersaline, alkaline lake located in Eastern Sierra Nevada, California, that is dominated by microbial life. This unique ecosystem offers a natural laboratory for probing microbial community responses to environmental change. In 2017, a heavy snowpack and subsequent runoff led Mono Lake to transition from annually mixed (monomictic) to indefinitely stratified (meromictic). We followed microbial succession during this limnological shift, establishing a two‐year (2017–2018) water‐column time series of geochemical and microbiological data. Following meromictic conditions, anoxia persisted below the chemocline and reduced compounds such as sulfide and ammonium increased in concentration from near 0 to ~400 and ~150 µM, respectively, throughout 2018. We observed significant microbial succession, with trends varying by water depth. In the epilimnion (above the chemocline), aerobic heterotrophs were displaced by phototrophic genera when a large bloom of cyanobacteria appeared in fall 2018. Bacteria in the hypolimnion (below the chemocline) had a delayed, but systematic, response reflecting colonization by sediment “seed bank” communities. Phototrophic sulfide‐oxidizing bacteria appeared first in summer 2017, followed by microbes associated with anaerobic fermentation in spring 2018, and eventually sulfate‐reducing taxa by fall 2018. This slow shift indicated that multi‐year meromixis was required to establish a sulfate‐reducing community in Mono Lake, although sulfide oxidizers thrive throughout mixing regimes. The abundant green alga Picocystis remained the dominant primary producer during the meromixis event, abundant throughout the water column including in the hypolimnion despite the absence of light and prevalence of sulfide. Our study adds to the growing literature describing microbial resistance and resilience during lake mixing events related to climatic events and environmental change. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2021-02-25 2021-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8359280/ /pubmed/33629529 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12437 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Geobiology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Phillips, Alexandra A.
Speth, Daan R.
Miller, Laurence G.
Wang, Xingchen T.
Wu, Fenfang
Medeiros, Patricia M.
Monteverde, Danielle R.
Osburn, Magdalena R.
Berelson, William M.
Betts, Hannah L.
Wijker, Reto S.
Mullin, Sean W.
Johnson, Hope A.
Orphan, Victoria J.
Fischer, Woodward W.
Sessions, Alex L.
Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California
title Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California
title_full Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California
title_fullStr Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California
title_full_unstemmed Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California
title_short Microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic Mono Lake, California
title_sort microbial succession and dynamics in meromictic mono lake, california
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8359280/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33629529
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12437
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