溶洞微生物群落

A. S. Ryabova, L. Kuzmina, N. F. Galimzyanova
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引用次数: 0

摘要

溶洞内特殊的地球化学、水文和小气候条件决定了溶洞内独特的细菌群落的发育。这些群落的微生物群具有复杂的,通常是独特的相互作用机制,目前还不能完全确定它们的物种组成。在洞穴细菌中,最常见的是Alfaproteobacteria、Betaproteobacteria、Gammaproteobacteria和Actinobacteria的代表。缺乏光照,缺乏营养和低温导致细菌的许多适应,如细胞大小减小,新陈代谢缓慢,膜脂和酶的变化,以及许多其他因素。在缺氧条件下,营养链的基础是趋化营养细菌。细菌的生长主要发生在矿物、土壤、墙壁的表面和水的上层。洞穴的岩石表面代表了微生物群落可能适合定植的最大区域。研究人员普遍认为,生活在墙壁上的细菌大多是洞穴微生物群,在人为负荷下最不容易受到变化的影响。细菌积极参与环境的地球化学转变:岩石的腐蚀和随后的矿物沉积。目前,生物矿化假说被普遍接受。一方面,晶体的形成只有活的微生物参与,另一方面,在这个过程中,环境的物理化学条件的变化是非常重要的。根据研究人员的说法,分泌的细胞外物质起着重要的作用,它们诱导被动矿化,或者相反,导致方解石的溶解。此外,众所周知,从洞穴中分离出来的微生物虽然仍然存活,但经过一段时间后会失去形成或破坏矿物结构的能力。参与矿物基质转化的细菌并不局限于分类群,而是作为多物种群落的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
MICROBIAL COMMUNITIES OF KARST CAVES
Special geochemical, hydrological and microclimatic conditions in karst caves lead to the development of unique bacterial communities in them. The microbiota of such communities has complex, often unique mechanisms of interaction, which currently does not allow us to fully identify their species composition. Among the bacteria in caves, the most common are representatives of Alfaproteobacteria, Betaproteobacteria, Gammaproteobacteria and Actinobacteria. Lack of light, lack of nutrients and low temperatures lead to a number of adaptations in bacteria, such as a decrease in cell size, slow metabolism, changes in membrane lipids and enzymes, and a number of others. In aphotic conditions, the basis of trophic chains are chemolithotrophic bacteria. The development of bacteria occurs mostly on the surface of mineral formations, soil, walls and in the upper layer of water. Rocky surfaces of caves represent the largest areas potentially suitable for colonization by microbial communities. There is a widespread assumption among researchers that the bacteria living on the walls are mostly cave microbiota and are the least susceptible to changes under anthropogenic load. Bacteria are actively involved in the geochemical transformations of the environment: corrosion of rocks the subsequent deposition of mineral formations. At present, the hypothesis of biogenic mineralization is generally accepted. On the one hand, crystal formation occurs with the participation of only living microorganisms, on the other hand, a change in the physicochemical conditions of the environment is of no small importance in this process. A significant role, according to researchers, is played by secreted extracellular substances that induce passive mineralization or, conversely, cause the dissolution of calcite. In addition, it is known that microorganisms isolated from caves, while remaining viable, after some time lose their ability to form or destroy mineral formations. Bacteria involved in the transformation of mineral substrates are not confined to taxonomic groups and act as part of multispecies communities.
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