Between a Rock and a Soft Place: Biomass δ15N Values of Yellowstone Hot Spring Microbial Communities and Their Potential for Preservation in the Rock Record
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Nitrogen isotope (δ15N) values in ancient rocks have been used to interpret the presence of nitrogen metabolisms and fixed N availability across the Archean and Paleoproterozoic eons. However, how δ15N signals produced by nitrogen metabolisms of microbial communities, the impact of the geochemical environments they live in on those signals, and the fidelity of those signals through preservation in the rock record have not been fully constrained and validated. Thus, it is imperative to study modern microbial systems to test the validity of using δ15N signals produced by microbial communities to interpret what geochemical environments and nitrogen metabolisms influenced the production of those signals. Hydrothermal systems are an ideal place to examine the biotic and abiotic factors that impact δ15N signals—physical processes generate geochemical environments with wide ranges of fixed N availability and the physicochemical environments exclude multicellular eukaryotic organisms. Previous work has demonstrated the presence of nitrogen fixation genes in microbial communities across a range of temperature (16–89°C) and pH (1.9–9.8) gradients. Here, we test the validity and fidelity of using microbial community δ15N signals as indicators of geochemical environment and nitrogen metabolisms (specifically, biological nitrogen fixation) present in eight hydrothermal systems across Yellowstone National Park. Our results suggest that δ15N values measured in the ancient rock record can provide information about the N cycling and prevailing environmental conditions during deposition, but only if viewed within appropriate context.
期刊介绍:
JGR-Biogeosciences focuses on biogeosciences of the Earth system in the past, present, and future and the extension of this research to planetary studies. The emerging field of biogeosciences spans the intellectual interface between biology and the geosciences and attempts to understand the functions of the Earth system across multiple spatial and temporal scales. Studies in biogeosciences may use multiple lines of evidence drawn from diverse fields to gain a holistic understanding of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems and extreme environments. Specific topics within the scope of the section include process-based theoretical, experimental, and field studies of biogeochemistry, biogeophysics, atmosphere-, land-, and ocean-ecosystem interactions, biomineralization, life in extreme environments, astrobiology, microbial processes, geomicrobiology, and evolutionary geobiology