Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas.
Coshell and Associates, South Perth, Western Australia, Australia.
Geobiology. 2019 Sep;17(5):536-550. doi: 10.1111/gbi.12344. Epub 2019 May 22.
Modern microbialites are often located within groundwater discharge zones, yet the role of groundwater in microbialite accretion has yet to be resolved. To understand relationships between groundwater, microbialites, and associated microbial communities, we quantified and characterized groundwater flow and chemistry in active thrombolitic microbialites in Lake Clifton, Western Australia, and compared these observations to inactive thrombolites and lakebed sediments. Groundwater flows upward through an interconnected network of pores within the microstructure of active thrombolites, discharging directly from thrombolite heads into the lake. This upwelling groundwater is fresher than lake water and is hypothesized to support microbial mat growth by reducing salinity and providing limiting nutrients in an osmotically stressful and oligotrophic habitat. This is in contrast to inactive thrombolites that show no evidence of microbial mat colonization and are infiltrated by hypersaline lake water. Groundwater discharge through active thrombolites contrasts with the surrounding lakebed, where hypersaline lake water flows downward through sandy sediments at very low rates. Based on an appreciation for the role of microorganisms in thrombolite accretion, our findings suggest conditions favorable to thrombolite formation still exist in certain locations of Lake Clifton despite increasing lake water salinity. This study is the first to characterize groundwater flow rates, paths, and chemistry within a microbialite-forming environment and provides new insight into how groundwater can support microbial mats believed to contribute to microbialite formation in modern and ancient environments.
现代微生物岩通常位于地下水排泄区,但地下水在微生物岩堆积中的作用尚未得到解决。为了了解地下水、微生物岩和相关微生物群落之间的关系,我们量化和描述了西澳大利亚克利夫顿湖活跃的血栓状微生物岩中的地下水流动和化学特性,并将这些观察结果与不活跃的血栓状微生物岩和湖底沉积物进行了比较。地下水通过活跃的血栓状微生物岩微结构内的相互连接的孔隙向上流动,并直接从血栓状微生物岩头部排入湖中。这种上升的地下水比湖水更新鲜,据推测通过降低盐度并在渗透胁迫和贫营养的生境中提供限制养分,支持微生物席的生长。这与不活跃的血栓状微生物岩形成对比,后者没有微生物席定殖的证据,并且被高盐度的湖水渗透。活跃的血栓状微生物岩中的地下水排泄与周围的湖底形成对比,高盐度的湖水在非常低的速率下通过沙质沉积物向下流动。基于对微生物在血栓状微生物岩形成中的作用的认识,我们的发现表明,尽管湖水盐度不断增加,但在克利夫顿湖的某些位置,仍然存在有利于血栓状微生物岩形成的条件。本研究首次对形成微生物岩的环境中的地下水流动速率、路径和化学特性进行了描述,并提供了新的见解,说明地下水如何能够支持被认为有助于现代和古代环境中微生物岩形成的微生物席。