Jørgensen Bo Barker, Boetius Antje
Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology, Celsiusstrasse 1, Bremen D-28359, Germany.
Nat Rev Microbiol. 2007 Oct;5(10):770-81. doi: 10.1038/nrmicro1745.
The seabed is a diverse environment that ranges from the desert-like deep seafloor to the rich oases that are present at seeps, vents, and food falls such as whales, wood or kelp. As well as the sedimentation of organic material from above, geological processes transport chemical energy--hydrogen, methane, hydrogen sulphide and iron--to the seafloor from the subsurface below, which provides a significant proportion of the deep-sea energy. At the sites on the seafloor where chemical energy is delivered, rich and diverse microbial communities thrive. However, most subsurface microorganisms live in conditions of extreme energy limitation, with mean generation times of up to thousands of years. Even in the most remote subsurface habitats, temperature rather than energy seems to set the ultimate limit for life, and in the deep biosphere, where energy is most depleted, life might even be based on the cleavage of water by natural radioisotopes. Here, we review microbial biodiversity and function in these intriguing environments.
海底是一个多样的环境,从类似沙漠的深海海底到存在于渗漏口、喷口以及诸如鲸鱼、木材或海带等食物坠落处的丰富绿洲。除了上方有机物质的沉积外,地质过程还将化学能量——氢气、甲烷、硫化氢和铁——从下方的地下输送到海底,这提供了深海能量的很大一部分。在化学能量被输送到的海底区域,丰富多样的微生物群落蓬勃发展。然而,大多数地下微生物生活在极端能量限制的条件下,平均世代时间长达数千年。即使在最偏远的地下栖息地,温度而非能量似乎才是生命的最终限制因素,而在能量最匮乏的深层生物圈中,生命甚至可能基于天然放射性同位素对水的裂解。在此,我们综述了这些迷人环境中的微生物多样性和功能。