Department of Biological Sciences, Humboldt State University, Arcata, CA, USA.
Geobiology. 2013 Jul;11(4):356-76. doi: 10.1111/gbi.12041. Epub 2013 May 17.
Boiling Springs Lake (BSL) in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California, is North America's largest hot spring, but little is known about the physical, chemical, and biological features of the system. Using a remotely operated vessel, we characterized the bathymetry and near-surface temperatures at sub-meter resolution. The majority of the 1.2 ha, pH 2.2 lake is 10 m deep and 50-52 °C, but temperatures reach 93 °C locally. We extracted DNA from water and sediments collected from warm (52 °C) and hot (73-83 °C) sites separated by 180 m. Gene clone libraries and functional gene microarray (GeoChip 3.0) were used to investigate the BSL community, and uptake of radiolabeled carbon sources was used to assess the relative importance of heterotrophic vs. autotrophic production. Microbial assemblages are similar in both sites despite the strong temperature differential, supporting observations of a dynamic, convectively mixed system. Bacteria in the Actinobacteria and Aquificales phyla are abundant in the water column, and Archaea distantly related to known taxa are abundant in sediments. The functional potential appears similar across a 5-year time span, indicating a stable community with little inter-annual variation, despite the documented seasonal temperature cycle. BSL water-derived DNA contains genes for complete C, N, and S cycles, and low hybridization to probes for N and S oxidation suggests that reductive processes dominate. Many of the detected genes for these processes were from uncultivated bacteria, suggesting novel organisms are responsible for key ecosystem services. Selection imposed by low nutrients, low pH, and high temperature appear to result in low diversity and evenness of genes for key functions involved in C, N, and S cycling. Conversely, organic degradation genes appear to be functionally redundant, and the rapid assimilation of radiolabeled organic carbon into BSL cells suggests the importance of allochthonous C fueling heterotrophic production in the BSL C cycle.
美国加利福尼亚州拉森火山国家公园的沸腾泉(BSL)是北美最大的温泉,但人们对该系统的物理、化学和生物特征知之甚少。我们使用遥控船对其水深和近表面温度进行了亚米级分辨率的测绘。这个 1.2 公顷的湖泊,pH 值为 2.2,大部分深度为 10 米,温度为 50-52°C,但局部温度可达 93°C。我们从来自 52°C(温暖)和 73-83°C(炎热)地点的水和沉积物中提取 DNA,这两个地点相距 180 米。基因克隆文库和功能基因微阵列(GeoChip 3.0)用于研究 BSL 群落,放射性标记碳源的吸收用于评估异养与自养生产的相对重要性。尽管温度差异很大,但两个地点的微生物群落相似,这支持了对流混合系统动态的观测。水柱中富含放线菌和泉古菌门的细菌,而沉积物中富含与已知分类群关系较远的古菌。尽管有记录表明存在季节性温度周期,但在 5 年的时间跨度内,功能潜力似乎相似,表明该群落稳定,年度间变化很小。BSL 水源性 DNA 含有完整的 C、N 和 S 循环基因,对 N 和 S 氧化探针的低杂交表明,还原过程占主导地位。这些过程中许多被检测到的基因来自未培养的细菌,这表明新的生物体负责关键的生态系统服务。低养分、低 pH 值和高温带来的选择似乎导致与 C、N 和 S 循环关键功能相关的基因多样性和均匀度降低。相反,有机降解基因似乎具有功能冗余性,放射性标记有机碳迅速被 BSL 细胞同化,这表明异养生产中 BSLC 循环的异源 C 燃料的重要性。