6533b7dafe1ef96bd126e16c

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Prokaryotic assemblages within permafrost active layer at Edmonson Point (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica)

S. Cabral AndersonRosabruna La FerlaMaria PapaleAngelina Lo GiudiceMauro GuglielminAnu MikkonenGabriella CarusoLuigi MichaudCarmen RizzoRodolfo ParanhosAntonella ConteG. MaimoneAlessandro Ciro RappazzoMaurizio AzzaroNunziacarla Spanò

subject

0301 basic medicinemetabolic activitiesFirmicutesta1172seasonally thawed active layerSoil ScienceikiroutaAntarctica; Metabolic activities; Prokaryotic community; Seasonally thawed active layer; Microbiology; Soil SciencePermafrostMicrobiologyActinobacteria03 medical and health sciencesAbundance (ecology)Organic mattermikrobitaineenvaihduntaNitrogen cycleAntarctica Metabolic activities Prokaryotic community Seasonally thawed active layer Microbiology Soil Sciencechemistry.chemical_classificationbiologyEcologyta1183prokaryotic communitybiology.organism_classificationmikrobisto030104 developmental biologychemistryHabitatEnvironmental scienceAntarcticaantarktinen alueProteobacteria

description

This study was aimed at gaining insights on the prokaryotic community (in terms of both taxonomic composition and activities) inhabiting the active layer at Edmonson Point, an ice-free area on the eastern slope at the foot of Mount Melbourne (Northern Victoria Land, Antarctica). Samples were collected during the thawing period, when microbial physiological activities are restored to utilize previously frozen organic substrates. Despite the very small cell sizes (600 daltons) substrates, as indicated also by the obtained rates of enzymatic hydrolytic activities over proteolytic, glycolitic and phosphoric compounds. Taxonomical composition showed that Proteobacteria, Actinobacteria and Firmicutes dominated the prokaryotic community, with most of their members playing crucial roles in organic matter turnover, as well as nitrogen cycling, or entering a viable but not cultivable state to cope with continuously changing environmental conditions, such as in the case of the active layer. Finally, non-autochthonous bacteria (mainly of marine origin) were detected and they probably contribute to the organic matter turnover within such cold terrestrial habitat. This research provides the first comprehensive account of the prokaryotic communities inhabiting the Antarctic permafrost and contributes to existing information on the response of their abundance and metabolism in a permafrost area that undergoes to seasonal changes (e.g. in terms of temperature, water availability and ice presence).

10.1016/j.soilbio.2018.05.004https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2018.05.004