Microbial Diversity and Activity of Biofilms from Geothermal Springs in Croatia
Hot spring biofilms are stable, highly complex microbial structures. They form at dynamic redox and light gradients and are composed of microorganisms adapted to the extreme temperatures and fluctuating geochemical conditions of geothermal environments. In Croatia, a large number of poorly investiga...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Microbial ecology 2023-11, Vol.86 (4), p.2305-2319 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Hot spring biofilms are stable, highly complex microbial structures. They form at dynamic redox and light gradients and are composed of microorganisms adapted to the extreme temperatures and fluctuating geochemical conditions of geothermal environments. In Croatia, a large number of poorly investigated geothermal springs host biofilm communities. Here, we investigated the microbial community composition of biofilms collected over several seasons at 12 geothermal springs and wells. We found biofilm microbial communities to be temporally stable and highly dominated by
Cyanobacteria
in all but one high-temperature sampling site (Bizovac well). Of the physiochemical parameters recorded, temperature had the strongest influence on biofilm microbial community composition. Besides
Cyanobacteria
, the biofilms were mainly inhabited by
Chloroflexota
,
Gammaproteobacteria
, and
Bacteroidota
. In a series of incubations with
Cyanobacteria
-dominated biofilms from Tuhelj spring and
Chloroflexota
- and
Pseudomonadota
-dominated biofilms from Bizovac well, we stimulated either chemoorganotrophic or chemolithotrophic community members, to determine the fraction of microorganisms dependent on organic carbon (in situ predominantly produced via photosynthesis) versus energy derived from geochemical redox gradients (here simulated by addition of thiosulfate). We found surprisingly similar levels of activity in response to all substrates in these two distinct biofilm communities, and observed microbial community composition and hot spring geochemistry to be poor predictors of microbial activity in the study systems. |
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ISSN: | 0095-3628 1432-184X |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00248-023-02239-1 |