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Description
Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are critical components of arid and semiarid environments and provide the primary sources of bioavailable macronutrients and increase micronutrient availability to their surrounding ecosystems. BSCs are composed of a variety of microorganisms that perform a wide range of physiological processes requiring a multitude of bioessential micronutrients,

Biological soil crusts (BSCs) are critical components of arid and semiarid environments and provide the primary sources of bioavailable macronutrients and increase micronutrient availability to their surrounding ecosystems. BSCs are composed of a variety of microorganisms that perform a wide range of physiological processes requiring a multitude of bioessential micronutrients, such as iron, copper, and molybdenum. This work investigated the effects of BSC activity on soil solution concentrations of bioessential elements and examined the microbial production of organic chelators, called siderophores. I found that aluminum, vanadium, copper, zinc, and molybdenum were solubilized in the action of crusts, while nickel, zinc, arsenic, and zirconium were immobilized by crust activity. Potassium and manganese displayed behavior consistent with biological removal and mobilization, whereas phosphorus and iron solubility were dominated by abiotic processes. The addition of bioavailable nitrogen altered the effects of BSCs on soil element mobilization. In addition, I found that the biogeochemical activites of BSCs were limited by molybdenum, a fact that likely contributes to co-limitation by nitrogen. I confirmed the presence of siderophore producing microbes in BSCs. Siderophores are low-molecular weight organic compounds that are released by bacteria to increase element solubility and facilitate element uptake; siderophore production is likely the mechanism by which BSCs affect the patterns I observed in soil solution element concentrations. Siderophore producers were distributed across a range of bacterial groups and ecological niches within crusts, suggesting that siderophore production influences the availability of a variety of elements for use in many physiological processes. Four putative siderophore compounds were identified using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry; further attempts to characterize the compounds confirmed two true siderophores. Taken together, the results of my work provide information about micronutrient cycling within crusts that can be applied to BSC conservation and management. Fertilization with certain elements, particularly molybdenum, may prove to be a useful technique to promote BSC growth and development which would help prevent arid land degradation. Furthermore, understanding the effects of BSCs on soil element mobility could be used to develop useful biomarkers for the study of the existence and distribution of crust-like communities on ancient Earth, and perhaps other places, like Mars.
ContributorsNoonan, Kathryn Alexander (Author) / Hartnett, Hilairy (Thesis advisor) / Anbar, Ariel (Committee member) / Garcia-Pichel, Ferran (Committee member) / Shock, Everett (Committee member) / Sharp, Thomas (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
One goal of geobiochemistry is to follow geochemical energy supplies from the external environment to the inside of microbial cells. This can be accomplished by combining thermodynamic calculations of energy supplies from geochemical processes and energy demands for biochemical processes. Progress towards this goal is summarized here. A critique of

One goal of geobiochemistry is to follow geochemical energy supplies from the external environment to the inside of microbial cells. This can be accomplished by combining thermodynamic calculations of energy supplies from geochemical processes and energy demands for biochemical processes. Progress towards this goal is summarized here. A critique of all thermodynamic data for biochemical compounds involved in the citric acid cycle (CAC) and the formulation of metabolite properties allows predictions of the energy involved in each step of the cycle as well as the full forward and reverse cycles over wide ranges of temperature and pressure. These results allow evaluation of energy demands at the center of many microbial metabolic systems. Field work, sampling, and lab analyses from two low-temperature systems, a serpentinizing system, and a subglacial setting, provide the data used in these thermodynamic analyses of energy supplies. An extensive literature summary of microbial and molecular data from serpentinizing systems found is used to guide the evaluation and ranking of energy supplies used by chemolithoautotrophic microbes. These results constrain models of the distribution of microbial metabolisms throughout the low-temperature serpentinization systems in the Samail ophiolite in Oman (including locales of primary and subsequent alteration processes). Data collected from Robertson Glacier in Alberta, Canada, together with literature data from Lake Vida in Antarctica and bottom seawater, allowed thermodynamic analyses of low-temperature energy supplies in a glacial system. Results for 1460 inorganic redox reactions are used to fully inventory the geochemical energy sources that support the globally extensive cold biosphere.
ContributorsCanovas, Peter Anthony (Author) / Shock, Everett (Thesis advisor) / Hartnett, Hilairy (Committee member) / Sharp, Thomas (Committee member) / Tyburczy, James (Committee member) / Heimsath, Arjun (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016