Artigo Revisado por pares

Microbial diversity and the presence of algae in halite endolithic communities are correlated to atmospheric moisture in the hyper‐arid zone of the A tacama D esert

2013; Wiley; Volume: 17; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1111/1462-2920.12364

ISSN

1462-2920

Autores

Courtney K. Robinson, Jacek Wierzchoś, Celeste Black, Alexander Crits‐Christoph, Bing Ma, Jacques Ravel, Carmen Ascaso, Octavio Artieda, Sergio Valea, Mònica Roldán, Benito Gómez‐Silva, Jocelyne DiRuggiero,

Tópico(s)

Biocrusts and Microbial Ecology

Resumo

The Atacama Desert is one of the oldest and driest deserts in the world, and its hyper-arid core is described as 'the most barren region imaginable'. We used a combination of high-throughput sequencing and microscopy methods to characterize the endolithic microbial assemblages of halite pinnacles (salt rocks) collected in several hyper-arid areas of the desert. We found communities dominated by archaea that relied on a single phylotype of Halothece cyanobacteria for primary production. A few other phylotypes of salt-adapted bacteria and archaea, including Salinibacter, Halorhabdus, and Halococcus were major components of the halite communities, indicating specific adaptations to the unique halite environments. Multivariate statistical analyses of diversity metrics clearly separated the halite communities from that of the surrounding soil in the Yungay area. These analyses also revealed distribution patterns of halite communities correlated with atmospheric moisture. Microbial endolithic communities from halites exposed to coastal fogs and high relative humidity were more diverse; their archaeal and bacterial assemblages were accompanied by a novel algae related to oceanic picoplankton of the Mamiellales. In contrast, we did not find any algae in the Yungay pinnacles, suggesting that the environmental conditions in this habitat might be too extreme for eukaryotic photosynthetic life.

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