Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents

Microbial biogeography is being increasingly more studied, both in terms of genetic divisions and 'ecotype' variation. This thesis investigates the regional (100-1000s km) and local (10s m) distribution and diversity of microorganisms around hydrothermal vents and seamounts at the East Sco...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Djurhuus, A
Other Authors: Rogers, A, Mikalsen, S
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:727fb8de-a392-4030-bc86-6390143111fd
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spelling ftuloxford:oai:ora.ox.ac.uk:uuid:727fb8de-a392-4030-bc86-6390143111fd 2023-05-15T13:41:28+02:00 Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents Djurhuus, A Rogers, A Mikalsen, S 2016-10-04 https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:727fb8de-a392-4030-bc86-6390143111fd unknown https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:727fb8de-a392-4030-bc86-6390143111fd info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Thesis 2016 ftuloxford 2022-06-28T20:15:22Z Microbial biogeography is being increasingly more studied, both in terms of genetic divisions and 'ecotype' variation. This thesis investigates the regional (100-1000s km) and local (10s m) distribution and diversity of microorganisms around hydrothermal vents and seamounts at the East Scotia Ridge and the Southwest Indian Ridge. Microbial communities were characterized using Illumina dye sequencing to de- termine taxon richness and diversity and flow cytometry to obtain cell counts. In addition I investigated the physicochemical environment (nutrients, organic carbon, salinity and temperature) in which the microorganisms persist. Typical deep-sea microorganisms were abundant at vents and below the euphotic zone on the seamounts. The surface layer of the seamounts contained typical open-ocean photoautotrophic organisms. Microbial communities were correlated to or- ganic carbon on both hydrothermal vents and seamounts. With microorganisms possi- bly having a large influence on carbon sequestration into the deep-sea from hydrothermal vents. On a local scale the hydrothermal vents had a relatively higher abundance of chemosynthetic Epsilonproteobacteria and the Gammaproteobacteria family SUP05, which were closely correlated to the redox potential in the vent effluent. This was prominent in both plumes from the East Scotia Ridge and the Southwest Indian Ridge, which also had distinct microbial community structures. Across the Southwest Indian Ocean the microbial communities were firstly segregated by depth. However, on a regional scale their physical environment primarily divided the microbial communities into three biological regimes the sub-tropical, con- vergence zone and the sub-Antarctic. The microbial community structure and biogeography is influenced by steep environmental gradients, displaying a distance-decay relationship between sampling locations. With environmental conditions persisting at different scales, from local (10s m) around the hydrothermal vents to regional (100-1000 km) between the seamounts, ... Thesis Antarc* Antarctic ORA - Oxford University Research Archive Antarctic East Scotia Ridge ENVELOPE(-29.250,-29.250,-57.917,-57.917) Indian
institution Open Polar
collection ORA - Oxford University Research Archive
op_collection_id ftuloxford
language unknown
description Microbial biogeography is being increasingly more studied, both in terms of genetic divisions and 'ecotype' variation. This thesis investigates the regional (100-1000s km) and local (10s m) distribution and diversity of microorganisms around hydrothermal vents and seamounts at the East Scotia Ridge and the Southwest Indian Ridge. Microbial communities were characterized using Illumina dye sequencing to de- termine taxon richness and diversity and flow cytometry to obtain cell counts. In addition I investigated the physicochemical environment (nutrients, organic carbon, salinity and temperature) in which the microorganisms persist. Typical deep-sea microorganisms were abundant at vents and below the euphotic zone on the seamounts. The surface layer of the seamounts contained typical open-ocean photoautotrophic organisms. Microbial communities were correlated to or- ganic carbon on both hydrothermal vents and seamounts. With microorganisms possi- bly having a large influence on carbon sequestration into the deep-sea from hydrothermal vents. On a local scale the hydrothermal vents had a relatively higher abundance of chemosynthetic Epsilonproteobacteria and the Gammaproteobacteria family SUP05, which were closely correlated to the redox potential in the vent effluent. This was prominent in both plumes from the East Scotia Ridge and the Southwest Indian Ridge, which also had distinct microbial community structures. Across the Southwest Indian Ocean the microbial communities were firstly segregated by depth. However, on a regional scale their physical environment primarily divided the microbial communities into three biological regimes the sub-tropical, con- vergence zone and the sub-Antarctic. The microbial community structure and biogeography is influenced by steep environmental gradients, displaying a distance-decay relationship between sampling locations. With environmental conditions persisting at different scales, from local (10s m) around the hydrothermal vents to regional (100-1000 km) between the seamounts, ...
author2 Rogers, A
Mikalsen, S
format Thesis
author Djurhuus, A
spellingShingle Djurhuus, A
Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
author_facet Djurhuus, A
author_sort Djurhuus, A
title Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
title_short Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
title_full Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
title_fullStr Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
title_full_unstemmed Microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
title_sort microbial oceanography of southern hemisphere seamounts and hydrothermal vents
publishDate 2016
url https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:727fb8de-a392-4030-bc86-6390143111fd
long_lat ENVELOPE(-29.250,-29.250,-57.917,-57.917)
geographic Antarctic
East Scotia Ridge
Indian
geographic_facet Antarctic
East Scotia Ridge
Indian
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation https://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:727fb8de-a392-4030-bc86-6390143111fd
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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