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Microbial ecology of a shallow alkaline hydrothermal vent: Strýtan Hydrothermal Field, Eyjafördur, northern Iceland

Katrina I. Twing, Lewis M. Ward, Zachary K. Kane, Alexa Sanders, R.E. Price, H. Lizethe Pendleton, Donato Giovannelli, William J. Brazelton, Shawn E. McGlynn

2022Frontiers in Microbiology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

∼70°C), anoxic, fresh fluids elevated in dissolved silica, with slightly elevated concentrations of hydrogen and methane. In contrast to other alkaline hydrothermal vents, SHF is unique because it is hosted in basalt and therefore the high pH is not created by serpentinization. While previous studies have assessed the geology and geochemistry of this site, the microbial diversity of SHF has not been explored in detail. Here we present a microbial diversity survey of the actively venting fluids and chimneys from Big Strýtan and Arnarnesstrýtan, using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Community members from the vent fluids are mostly aerobic heterotrophic bacteria; however, within the chimneys oxic, low oxygen, and anoxic habitats could be distinguished, where taxa putatively capable of acetogenesis, sulfur-cycling, and hydrogen metabolism were observed. Very few archaea were observed in the samples. The inhabitants of SHF are more similar to terrestrial hot spring samples than other marine sites. It has been hypothesized that life on Earth (and elsewhere in the solar system) could have originated in an alkaline hydrothermal system, however all other studied alkaline submarine hydrothermal systems to date are fueled by serpentinization. SHF adds to our understandings of hydrothermal vents in relationship to microbial diversity, evolution, and possibly the origin of life.

Topics & Concepts

Hydrothermal ventHydrothermal circulationEcologyField (mathematics)OceanographyGeologyEnvironmental scienceGeochemistryBiologyPaleontologyMathematicsPure mathematicsMethane Hydrates and Related PhenomenaMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyGeology and Paleoclimatology Research