Iron Minerals Influence the Assembly of Microbial Communities in a Basaltic Glacial Catchment

Authors

Eric C. Dunham, Lisa M. Keller, Mark L. Skidmore, K Rebecca Mitchell, Eric S. Boyd

Publication

Microbiology Ecology

Abstract

The influence of mineralogy on the assembly of microbial communities in glacial environments has been difficult to assess due to complications in isolating mineralogy from other variables. Here we assess the abundance and composition of microbial communities that colonized defined minerals incubated for 12 months in two meltwater streams (N and S) emanating from Kaldalónsjökull (Kal), a basalt-hosted glacier in Iceland. The two streams shared similar meltwater geochemistry as well as bedrock and proglacial sediment elemental compositions. Yet genomic DNA and PCR-amplifiable 16S rRNA genes were detected only in Kal S. The amount of recoverable DNA was highest for hematite incubated in Kal S and the composition of 16S rRNA genes recovered from Kal S sediments was most like those recovered from hematite and magnetite, an effect driven largely by similarities in the relative abundance of the putative hydrogenotrophic iron reducer Rhodoferax. We suggest this is attributable to comminution and weathering reactions involving exposed iron silicate minerals that generate and release hydrogen and Fe(III) that can be coupled to support microbial metabolism in Kaldalónsjökull, and possibly other basaltic habitats. The low abundance of cells in Kal N could be due to low availability of Fe(III) or another substrate.

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