doi:10.2306/scienceasia1513-1874.2009.35.215

ABSTRACT: Nitrogen is scarce in the sandstones of McMurdo Dry Valley, Antarctica, and the possibility for the input from precipitation is minimal. In endolithic communities dominated by phototrophs, nitrogen availability by nitrogen fixation may therefore be very important. To investigate this, nitr...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: R Esearch Article, Meenakshi Banerjee, Vidhi Verma
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.587.9092
http://www.scienceasia.org/2009.35.n3/scias35_215.pdf
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Summary:ABSTRACT: Nitrogen is scarce in the sandstones of McMurdo Dry Valley, Antarctica, and the possibility for the input from precipitation is minimal. In endolithic communities dominated by phototrophs, nitrogen availability by nitrogen fixation may therefore be very important. To investigate this, nitrogenase activity of the whole communities (rock plus microorganisms) of Linneus Terrace, McMurdo Dry Valley, was measured by acetylene reduction assay and environmental factors affecting the enzyme activity were studied. The activity obtained from these studies presumably came from the dominant phototroph identified, the ancient unicellular cyanobacterium Chroococcidiopsis. We describe a comparative study of nitrogen fixation where one set of experiments was conducted under conditions likely to be present in the Antarctic from where the samples were obtained i.e., 275 lux and 5 °C, and the other under laboratory conditions with 2500 lux and 20 °C. Our studies revealed that there was a distinct diurnal pattern of nitrogenase activity in these endoliths. Nitrogen fixation thus seems to be a very important activity in the Antarctic endoliths where there is a permanently immobilized layer of phototrophic cells exposed to extreme environmental conditions. It is probable that, although there is a drastic reduction in the photosynthesis active radiation of about 1-3 % photons reaching the phototrophic region of the endolith for photosynthesis during the day, it is this that provides the energy for nitrogen fixation during the night. Also a heterotrophic mechanism involved in the nitrogen fixation process cannot be ruled out, as osmolytes are abundant in these environments to protect the cells from desiccation.