Review Lecture - The chemosynthetic support of life and the microbial diversity at deep-sea hydrothermal vents

1985; Royal Society; Volume: 225; Issue: 1240 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1098/rspb.1985.0062

ISSN

2053-9193

Autores

Holger W. Jannasch,

Tópico(s)

Marine and coastal ecosystems

Resumo

Circulation of seawater through the upper few kilometres of oceanic crust at tectonic spreading zones results in a transformation of geothermal into chemical energy. Reduced inorganic species are emitted from warm (under 25 °C) and hot (under 400 °C) vents on the sea floor at depths of 1600 and 3000 m and are used by chemolithotrophic bacteria as terrestrial sources of energy for the primary production of organic carbon from carbon dioxide. Thus, the rich and unique animal populations found in the immediate vicinity of the vents represent ecosystems that are largely or totally independent of solar energy. They subsist by means of a food chain that is based on various microbial processes. In addition to aerobic and anaerobic bacterial chemosynthesis, a new type of symbiosis between yet undescribed chemolithotrophic prokaryotes and certain invertebrates appears to account for the major part of the total primary production at the deep-sea vent sites.

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