Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats

Biological dosimeters made from a monolayer of Bacillus subtilis spores were used to investigate the penetration of ultraviolet radiation into some widespread terrestrial microbial microhabitats at polar latitudes: at Mars Oasis (72°S) and Rothera Station (67°S) (UK) in the Antarctic (November 2000)...

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Published in:Polar Biology
Main Authors: Cockell, Charles, Rettberg, Petra, Horneck, Gerda, Scherer, Kerstin, Stokes, Dale M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/4989/
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:4989 2024-06-23T07:47:18+00:00 Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats Cockell, Charles Rettberg, Petra Horneck, Gerda Scherer, Kerstin Stokes, Dale M. 2003-01 https://oro.open.ac.uk/4989/ unknown Cockell, Charles <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/csc235.html>; Rettberg, Petra; Horneck, Gerda; Scherer, Kerstin and Stokes, Dale M. (2003). Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats. Polar Biology, 26(1) pp. 62–69. Journal Item PeerReviewed 2003 ftopenunivgb 2024-06-05T00:37:03Z Biological dosimeters made from a monolayer of Bacillus subtilis spores were used to investigate the penetration of ultraviolet radiation into some widespread terrestrial microbial microhabitats at polar latitudes: at Mars Oasis (72°S) and Rothera Station (67°S) (UK) in the Antarctic (November 2000) and on Devon Island, Canadian High Arctic (75°N) (July 2000 and 2001). Layers of soil or dust of S500 µm thickness, particularly in ice-free regions of the Arctic, could reduce UV exposure such that no inactivation of spores could be measured after 3 days. Control spores were killed in 24 h. Spores in artificial cryptoendolithic habitats with ~1 mm rock covering obtained a reduction of UV radiation-induced inactivation of at least 2 orders of magnitude. Hypolithic spores were protected against any inactivation for at least 4 days. Snow covers of between 5 and 15 cm thickness, depending on age and heterogeneity, attenuated UV radiation by an order of magnitude, although snow cover is seasonal and subject to climatic factors. These dosimetric data demonstrate that, except for microbes on the surface of soil grains, many terrestrial microbial communities are well protected from incident UV radiation by a variety of physical and biological coverings. This is in contrast to data reported for many polar aquatic microbial taxa, and might imply a greater robustness of terrestrial microbial communities against the effects of ozone depletion. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Arctic Devon Island Polar Biology The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Arctic Antarctic The Antarctic Devon Island ENVELOPE(-88.000,-88.000,75.252,75.252) Rothera ENVELOPE(-68.130,-68.130,-67.568,-67.568) Rothera Station ENVELOPE(-68.120,-68.120,-67.569,-67.569) Mars Oasis ENVELOPE(-68.250,-68.250,-71.879,-71.879) Polar Biology 26 1 62 69
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description Biological dosimeters made from a monolayer of Bacillus subtilis spores were used to investigate the penetration of ultraviolet radiation into some widespread terrestrial microbial microhabitats at polar latitudes: at Mars Oasis (72°S) and Rothera Station (67°S) (UK) in the Antarctic (November 2000) and on Devon Island, Canadian High Arctic (75°N) (July 2000 and 2001). Layers of soil or dust of S500 µm thickness, particularly in ice-free regions of the Arctic, could reduce UV exposure such that no inactivation of spores could be measured after 3 days. Control spores were killed in 24 h. Spores in artificial cryptoendolithic habitats with ~1 mm rock covering obtained a reduction of UV radiation-induced inactivation of at least 2 orders of magnitude. Hypolithic spores were protected against any inactivation for at least 4 days. Snow covers of between 5 and 15 cm thickness, depending on age and heterogeneity, attenuated UV radiation by an order of magnitude, although snow cover is seasonal and subject to climatic factors. These dosimetric data demonstrate that, except for microbes on the surface of soil grains, many terrestrial microbial communities are well protected from incident UV radiation by a variety of physical and biological coverings. This is in contrast to data reported for many polar aquatic microbial taxa, and might imply a greater robustness of terrestrial microbial communities against the effects of ozone depletion.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Cockell, Charles
Rettberg, Petra
Horneck, Gerda
Scherer, Kerstin
Stokes, Dale M.
spellingShingle Cockell, Charles
Rettberg, Petra
Horneck, Gerda
Scherer, Kerstin
Stokes, Dale M.
Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
author_facet Cockell, Charles
Rettberg, Petra
Horneck, Gerda
Scherer, Kerstin
Stokes, Dale M.
author_sort Cockell, Charles
title Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
title_short Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
title_full Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
title_fullStr Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
title_full_unstemmed Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
title_sort measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats
publishDate 2003
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/4989/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-88.000,-88.000,75.252,75.252)
ENVELOPE(-68.130,-68.130,-67.568,-67.568)
ENVELOPE(-68.120,-68.120,-67.569,-67.569)
ENVELOPE(-68.250,-68.250,-71.879,-71.879)
geographic Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
Devon Island
Rothera
Rothera Station
Mars Oasis
geographic_facet Arctic
Antarctic
The Antarctic
Devon Island
Rothera
Rothera Station
Mars Oasis
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Devon Island
Polar Biology
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Arctic
Devon Island
Polar Biology
op_relation Cockell, Charles <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/csc235.html>; Rettberg, Petra; Horneck, Gerda; Scherer, Kerstin and Stokes, Dale M. (2003). Measurements of microbial protection from ultraviolet radiation in polar terrestrial microhabitats. Polar Biology, 26(1) pp. 62–69.
container_title Polar Biology
container_volume 26
container_issue 1
container_start_page 62
op_container_end_page 69
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