Biogéosciences UMR6282, CNRS, Univ. Bourgogne Franche-Comté, 21000, Dijon, France.
Center for Fundamental and Applied Microbiomics and School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, 85282, Tempe, AZ, USA.
Nat Commun. 2018 Jun 28;9(1):2530. doi: 10.1038/s41467-018-04995-y.
While significant efforts have been invested in reconstructing the early evolution of the Earth's atmosphere-ocean-biosphere biogeochemical nitrogen cycle, the potential role of an early continental contribution by a terrestrial, microbial phototrophic biosphere has been largely overlooked. By transposing to the Archean nitrogen fluxes of modern topsoil communities known as biological soil crusts (terrestrial analogs of microbial mats), whose ancestors might have existed as far back as 3.2 Ga ago, we show that they could have impacted the evolution of the nitrogen cycle early on. We calculate that the net output of inorganic nitrogen reaching the Precambrian hydrogeological system could have been of the same order of magnitude as that of modern continents for a range of inhabited area as small as a few percent of that of present day continents. This contradicts the assumption that before the Great Oxidation Event, marine and continental biogeochemical nitrogen cycles were disconnected.
虽然在重建地球大气-海洋-生物地球化学氮循环的早期演化方面投入了大量努力,但早期陆地微生物光合作用生物圈对氮循环的潜在作用在很大程度上被忽视了。通过将现代表土群落(微生物垫的陆地类似物)的生物土壤结皮的氮通量转移到太古宙,我们表明它们可能很早就对氮循环的演化产生了影响。我们计算出,到达前寒武纪水文地质系统的无机氮净输出量可能与现代大陆的氮输出量相当,而居住面积仅为当今大陆面积的一小部分。这与在大氧化事件之前,海洋和陆地生物地球化学氮循环是相互分离的假设相矛盾。