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Microbial Diversity, Community Turnover, and Putative Functions in Submarine Canyon Sediments under the Action of Sedimentary Geology

Hualin Liu, Xue-Yu Cai, Kunwen Luo, Sihan Chen, Ming Su, Jianguo Lü

2023Microbiology Spectrum14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Deep-sea microbes have received growing attention due to their contribution to biogeochemical cycles and climate change. However, related research lags due to the difficulty of collecting samples. Based on our previous study, which revealed the formation of sediments under the dual action of turbidity currents and seafloor obstacles in a submarine canyon in the South China Sea, this interdisciplinary research provides new insights into how sedimentary geology influences microbial community assembly in sediments. We proposed some uncommon or new findings, including the following: (i) microbial diversity was much lower on the surface than in deeper layers (ii) archaea and bacteria dominated the surface and deep layers, respectively; (iii) sedimentary geology played key roles in vertical community turnover; and (iv) the microbes have great potential to catalyze sulfur, carbon, and methane cycling. This study may lead to extensive discussion of the assembly and function of deep-sea microbial communities in the context of geology.

Topics & Concepts

Submarine canyonGeologyCanyonSedimentary rockDiversity (politics)OceanographyEcologyGeomorphologyGeochemistryBiologySociologyAnthropologyMicrobial Community Ecology and PhysiologyMethane Hydrates and Related PhenomenaMarine Biology and Ecology Research
Microbial Diversity, Community Turnover, and Putative Functions in Submarine Canyon Sediments under the Action of Sedimentary Geology | Litcius