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Published November 2009 | Published
Journal Article Open

Chemotrophic Microbial Mats and Their Potential for Preservation in the Rock Record

Abstract

Putative microbialites are commonly regarded to have formed in association with photosynthetic microorganisms, such as cyanobacteria. However, many modern microbial mat ecosystems are dominated by chemotrophic bacteria and archaea. Like phototrophs, filamentous sulfur-oxidizing bacteria form large mats at the sediment/water interface that can act to stabilize sediments, and their metabolic activities may mediate the formation of marine phosphorites. Similarly, bacteria and archaea associated with the anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) catalyze the precipitation of seafloor authigenic carbonates. When preserved, lipid biomarkers, isotopic signatures, body fossils, and lithological indicators of the local depositional environment may be used to identify chemotrophic mats in the rock record. The recognition of chemotrophic communities in the rock record has the potential to transform our understanding of ancient microbial ecologies, evolution, and geochemical conditions. Chemotrophic microbes on Earth occupy naturally occurring interfaces between oxidized and reduced chemical species and thus may provide a new set of search criteria to target life-detection efforts on other planets.

Additional Information

© 2009 Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. We thank Bo Barker Jørgensen, Heide Schulz-Vogt, Tina Treude, Jens Greinert, Chris House, Sarah Greene, Beth Orcutt, Katrina Edwards, and Ian R. MacDonald for contributing or for helping to acquire images used in this manuscript. We also thank Heide Schulz-Vogt, Tomaso Bontognali, and four anonymous reviewers for helpful comments that greatly improved this manuscript. J.V.B. is supported by the Agouron Institute Geobiology Postdoctoral Fellowship Program (Grant # AI-F-GB12.09.2). The Gulf of Mexico, Eel River Basin, and Costa Rica Margin images were obtained during projects funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation (OCE-0085549 to S.B.J.; MCB-0348492 to V.J.O.; and OCE-0825791 to V.J.O.). Images from the Loihi Seamount were taken during cruise MGLN10MV, Jason Dive J2-242 (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute) as part of the Iron Microbiology Observatory Project.

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