Paerl HW, Priscu JC
Institute of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 3431 Arendell Street, Morehead City, NC 28557, USA
Microb Ecol. 1998 Nov;36(3):221-230. doi: 10.1007/s002489900109.
Abstract The McMurdo Dry Valley lakes, Antarctica, one of the Earth's southernmost ecosystems containing liquid water, harbor some of the most environmentally extreme (cold, nutrient-deprived) conditions on the planet. Lake Bonney has a permanent ice cover that supports a unique microbial habitat, provided by soil particles blown onto the lake surface from the surrounding, ice-free valley floor. During continuous sunlight summers (Nov.-Feb.), the dark soil particles are heated by solar radiation and melt their way into the ice matrix. Layers and patches of aggregates and liquid water are formed. Aggregates contain a complex cyanobacterial-bacterial community, concurrently conducting photosynthesis (CO2 fixation), nitrogen (N2) fixation, decomposition, and biogeochemical zonation needed to complete essential nutrient cycles. Aggregate-associated CO2- and N2-fixation rates were low and confined to liquid water (i.e., no detectable activities in the ice phase). CO2 fixation was mediated by cyanobacteria; both cyanobacteria and eubacteria appeared responsible for N2 fixation. CO2 fixation was stimulated primarily by nitrogen (NO3-), but also by phosphorus (PO43-). PO43- and iron (FeCl3 + EDTA) enrichment stimulated of N2 fixation. Microautoradiographic and physiological studies indicate a morphologically and metabolically diverse microbial community, exhibiting different cell-specific photosynthetic and heterotrophic activities. The microbial community is involved in physical (particle aggregation) and chemical (establishing redox gradients) modification of a nutrient- and organic matter-enriched microbial "oasis," embedded in the desertlike (i.e., nutrient depleted) lake ice cover. Aggregate-associated production and nutrient cycling represent microbial self-sustenance in a microenvironment supporting "life at the edge," as it is known on Earth.
摘要 麦克默多干谷湖泊位于南极洲,是地球上最南端存在液态水的生态系统之一,拥有地球上一些环境最为极端(寒冷、营养匮乏)的条件。邦尼湖有一层永久冰盖,其表面由从周围无冰谷底吹到湖面的土壤颗粒构成了独特的微生物栖息地。在连续日照的夏季(11月至次年2月),深色土壤颗粒被太阳辐射加热,并融入冰基质中。由此形成了聚集物层和斑块以及液态水。聚集物中包含一个复杂的蓝细菌 - 细菌群落,它们同时进行光合作用(固定二氧化碳)、固氮(固定N₂)、分解以及生物地球化学分区,以完成基本的营养循环。与聚集物相关的二氧化碳和氮气固定速率较低,且仅限于液态水(即冰相中未检测到活动)。二氧化碳固定由蓝细菌介导;蓝细菌和真细菌似乎都参与了氮气固定。二氧化碳固定主要受氮(NO₃⁻)刺激,但也受磷(PO₄³⁻)刺激。PO₄³⁻和铁(FeCl₃ + EDTA)的富集刺激了氮气固定。微观放射自显影和生理学研究表明,该微生物群落形态和代谢多样,表现出不同的细胞特异性光合和异养活性。这个微生物群落参与了富含营养和有机物的微生物“绿洲”的物理(颗粒聚集)和化学(建立氧化还原梯度)修饰,该“绿洲”镶嵌在类似沙漠(即营养匮乏)的湖冰覆盖层中。与聚集物相关的生产和营养循环代表了在支持“边缘生命”的微环境中的微生物自我维持,这在地球上是众所周知的。