Biogeochemical probing of microbial communities in a basalt‐hosted hot spring at Kverkfjöll volcano, Iceland

Abstract We investigated bacterial and archaeal communities along an ice‐fed surficial hot spring at Kverkfjöll volcano—a partially ice‐covered basaltic volcano at Vatnajökull glacier, Iceland, using biomolecular (16S rRNA , apsA , mcrA , amoA , nifH genes) and stable isotope techniques. The hot spr...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Geobiology
Main Authors: Cousins, Claire R., Fogel, Marilyn, Bowden, Roxane, Crawford, Ian, Boyce, Adrian, Cockell, Charles, Gunn, Matthew
Other Authors: NASA Astrobiology Institute, Royal Society of Edinburgh, W. M. Keck Foundation, Leverhulme Trust
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12291
https://api.wiley.com/onlinelibrary/tdm/v1/articles/10.1111%2Fgbi.12291
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/gbi.12291
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Summary:Abstract We investigated bacterial and archaeal communities along an ice‐fed surficial hot spring at Kverkfjöll volcano—a partially ice‐covered basaltic volcano at Vatnajökull glacier, Iceland, using biomolecular (16S rRNA , apsA , mcrA , amoA , nifH genes) and stable isotope techniques. The hot spring environment is characterized by high temperatures and low dissolved oxygen concentrations at the source (68°C and <1 mg/L (±0.1%)) changing to lower temperatures and higher dissolved oxygen downstream (34.7°C and 5.9 mg/L), with sulfate the dominant anion (225 mg/L at the source). Sediments are comprised of detrital basalt, low‐temperature alteration phases and pyrite, with <0.4 wt. % total organic carbon ( TOC ). 16S rRNA gene profiles reveal that organisms affiliated with Hydrogenobaculum (54%–87% bacterial population) and Thermoproteales (35%–63% archaeal population) dominate the micro‐oxic hot spring source, while sulfur‐oxidizing archaea ( Sulfolobales, 57%–82%), and putative sulfur‐oxidizing and heterotrophic bacterial groups dominate oxic downstream environments. The δ 13 C org (‰ V‐ PDB ) values for sediment TOC and microbial biomass range from −9.4‰ at the spring's source decreasing to −12.6‰ downstream. A reverse effect isotope fractionation of ~3‰ between sediment sulfide (δ 34 S ~0‰) and dissolved water sulfate (δ 34 S +3.2‰), and δ 18 O values of ~ −5.3‰ suggest pyrite forms abiogenically from volcanic sulfide, followed by abiogenic and microbial oxidation. These environments represent an unexplored surficial geothermal environment analogous to transient volcanogenic habitats during putative “snowball Earth” scenarios and volcano–ice geothermal environments on Mars.