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1.
Geobiology ; 21(3): 341-354, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36567458

ABSTRACT

Oceanic Anoxic Events (OAEs) are conspicuous intervals in the geologic record that are associated with the deposition of organic carbon (OC)-rich marine sediment, linked to extreme biogeochemical perturbations, and characterized by widespread ocean deoxygenation. Mechanistic links between the marine biological carbon pump (BCP), redox conditions, and organic carbon burial during OAEs, however, remain poorly constrained. In this work we reconstructed the BCP in the western Tethys Ocean across OAE1a (~120 Mya) using sediment geochemistry and OC mass accumulation rates (OCAcc ). We find that OCAcc were between 0.006 and 3.3 gC m-2  yr-1 , with a mean value of 0.79 ± 0.78 SD gC m-2  yr-1 -these rates are low and comparable to oligotrophic regions in the modern oceans. This challenges longstanding assumptions that oceanic anoxic events are intervals of strongly elevated organic carbon burial. Numerical modelling of the BCP, furthermore, reveals that such low OC fluxes are only possible with either or both low to moderate OC export fluxes from ocean surface waters, with rates similar to oligotrophic (nutrient-poor, <30 gC m-2  yr-1 ) and mesotrophic (moderate-nutrients, ~50-100 gC m-2  yr-1 ) regions in the modern ocean, and stronger than modern vertical OC attenuation. The low OC fluxes thus reflect a relatively weak BCP. Low to moderate productivity is further supported by palaeoecological and geochemical evidence and was likely maintained through nutrient limitation that developed in response to the burial and sequestration of phosphorus in association with iron minerals under ferruginous (anoxic iron-rich) ocean conditions. Without persistently high productivity, ocean deoxygenation during OAE1a was more likely driven by other physicochemical and biological factors including ocean warming, changes in marine primary producer community composition, and fundamental shifts in the efficiency of the BCP with associated effects and feedbacks.


Subject(s)
Carbon , Oxygen , Carbon/analysis , Oxygen/analysis , Oceans and Seas , Geologic Sediments/chemistry , Iron
2.
Sci Adv ; 5(11): eaav2869, 2019 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31807693

ABSTRACT

Banded iron formation (BIF) deposition was the likely result of oxidation of ferrous iron in seawater by either oxygenic photosynthesis or iron-dependent anoxygenic photosynthesis-photoferrotrophy. BIF deposition, however, remains enigmatic because the photosynthetic biomass produced during iron oxidation is conspicuously absent from BIFs. We have addressed this enigma through experiments with photosynthetic bacteria and modeling of biogeochemical cycling in the Archean oceans. Our experiments reveal that, in the presence of silica, photoferrotroph cell surfaces repel iron (oxyhydr)oxides. In silica-rich Precambrian seawater, this repulsion would separate biomass from ferric iron and would lead to large-scale deposition of BIFs lean in organic matter. Excess biomass not deposited with BIF would have deposited in coastal sediments, formed organic-rich shales, and fueled microbial methanogenesis. As a result, the deposition of BIFs by photoferrotrophs would have contributed fluxes of methane to the atmosphere and thus helped to stabilize Earth's climate under a dim early Sun.

3.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 84(21)2018 11 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30120120

ABSTRACT

Algal blooms in lakes are often associated with anthropogenic eutrophication; however, they can occur without the human introduction of nutrients to a lake. A rare bloom of the alga Picocystis sp. strain ML occurred in the spring of 2016 at Mono Lake, a hyperalkaline lake in California, which was also at the apex of a multiyear-long drought. These conditions presented a unique sampling opportunity to investigate microbiological dynamics and potential metabolic function during an intense natural algal bloom. We conducted a comprehensive molecular analysis along a depth transect near the center of the lake from the surface to a depth of 25 m in June 2016. Across sampled depths, rRNA gene sequencing revealed that Picocystis-associated chloroplasts were found at 40 to 50% relative abundance, greater than values recorded previously. Despite high relative abundances of the photosynthetic oxygenic algal genus Picocystis, oxygen declined below detectable limits below a depth of 15 m, corresponding with an increase in microorganisms known to be anaerobic. In contrast to previously sampled years, both metagenomic and metatranscriptomic data suggested a depletion of anaerobic sulfate-reducing microorganisms throughout the lake's water column. Transcripts associated with photosystem I and II were expressed at both 2 m and 25 m, suggesting that limited oxygen production could occur at extremely low light levels at depth within the lake. Blooms of Picocystis appear to correspond with a loss of microbial activity such as sulfate reduction within Mono Lake, yet microorganisms may survive within the sediment to repopulate the lake water column as the bloom subsides.IMPORTANCE Mono Lake, California, provides a habitat to a unique ecological community that is heavily stressed due to recent human water diversions and a period of extended drought. To date, no baseline information exists from Mono Lake to understand how the microbial community responds to human-influenced drought or algal bloom or what metabolisms are lost in the water column as a consequence of such environmental pressures. While previously identified anaerobic members of the microbial community disappear from the water column during drought and bloom, sediment samples suggest that these microorganisms survive at the lake bottom or in the subsurface. Thus, the sediments may represent a type of seed bank that could restore the microbial community as a bloom subsides. Our work sheds light on the potential photosynthetic activity of the halotolerant alga Picocystis sp. strain ML and how the function and activity of the remainder of the microbial community responds during a bloom at Mono Lake.


Subject(s)
Chlorophyta/growth & development , Chlorophyta/metabolism , Phylogeny , California , Chlorophyta/classification , Chlorophyta/genetics , Chloroplasts/metabolism , Ecosystem , Eutrophication , Lakes/analysis , Photosynthesis , Phototrophic Processes , Seasons
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