Authors
Sara Borin, Lorenzo Brusetti, Francesca Mapelli, Giuseppe d'Auria, Tullio Brusa, Massimo Marzorati, Aurora Rizzi, Michail Yakimov, Danielle Marty, Gert J De Lange, Paul Van der Wielen, Henk Bolhuis, Terry J McGenity, Paraskevi N Polymenakou, Elisa Malinverno, Laura Giuliano, Cesare Corselli, Daniele Daffonchio
Publication date
2009/6/9
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
106
Issue
23
Pages
9151-9156
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
Urania basin in the deep Mediterranean Sea houses a lake that is >100 m deep, devoid of oxygen, 6 times more saline than seawater, and has very high levels of methane and particularly sulfide (up to 16 mM), making it among the most sulfidic water bodies on Earth. Along the depth profile there are 2 chemoclines, a steep one with the overlying oxic seawater, and another between anoxic brines of different density, where gradients of salinity, electron donors and acceptors occur. To identify and differentiate the microbes and processes contributing to the turnover of organic matter and sulfide along the water column, these chemoclines were sampled at a high resolution. Bacterial cell numbers increased up to a hundredfold in the chemoclines as a consequence of elevated nutrient availability, with higher numbers in the upper interface where redox gradient was steeper. Bacterial and archaeal communities, analyzed …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Borin, L Brusetti, F Mapelli, G d'Auria, T Brusa… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009