Microbial life on and below the seafloor : trends in anabolic activity in space and deep time

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Abstract/Contents

Abstract
The seafloor covers two thirds of our planet's surface and plays an essential role in maintaining planetary habitability and climate stability. In particular, microorganisms on and below the seafloor are the final gatekeepers of organic carbon burial, affecting oxygen production and carbon sequestration on geologic timescales. Although marine sediment archaea and bacteria are fundamental in Earth's elemental cycles, we know little about their anabolic activity rates, the physicochemical drivers of their metabolisms, the dominant players, and how their activity might change spatially and temporally. In the research described in this dissertation, I set up around 840 microcosm experiments to measure rates of specific benthic microbial metabolisms (total anabolic activity, heterotrophy, inorganic carbon fixation, and nitrogen fixation) in two global oceans. I used both manipulative and correlative approaches to identify key physicochemical controls on activity, and extrapolated rates of activity through space and deep time. In chapter 1, I improved the quantitation of cell-specific anabolic activity rates by tracking the effect of sample preparation on cellular isotope enrichments. I found that sample preparation decreases isotope enrichments by up to 80% -- much more than previously reported. I make recommendations for how to account for this effect experimentally and analytically. In chapter 2, I found that microbial anabolic activity in Pacific and Atlantic deep-sea sediments is primarily controlled by the availability of organic carbon and/or energy, not bioavailable nitrogen, and can be predicted by distance from shore. Using this insight, I demonstrated that shifting continental configurations in the last 400 million years might have significantly impacted benthic microbial activity, making a novel link between tectonics and microbiology. In chapter 3, I further explored carbon and energy limitation in surface sediments from Monterey Bay, California, and discovered that the microbial community is in fact limited by energy, not carbon. And in chapter 4, I found that the hydrothermally-influenced, deep marine biosphere at Guaymas Basin is active, and is exclusively composed of heterotrophs. But interestingly, these deep subsurface heterotrophs obtain ~5% of their carbon from inorganic sources. Together, marine benthic microorganisms live on the micron-scale, but they have outsized, long-term impacts on global biogeochemical cycles due to their sheer abundance and vast distribution.

Description

Type of resource text
Form electronic resource; remote; computer; online resource
Extent 1 online resource.
Place California
Place [Stanford, California]
Publisher [Stanford University]
Copyright date 2022; ©2022
Publication date 2022; 2022
Issuance monographic
Language English

Creators/Contributors

Author Meyer, Nicolette Ruimin
Degree supervisor Dekas, Anne
Thesis advisor Dekas, Anne
Thesis advisor Casciotti, Karen Lynn, 1974-
Thesis advisor Francis, Christopher
Thesis advisor Sperling, Erik
Degree committee member Casciotti, Karen Lynn, 1974-
Degree committee member Francis, Christopher
Degree committee member Sperling, Erik
Associated with Stanford University, Department of Earth System Science

Subjects

Genre Theses
Genre Text

Bibliographic information

Statement of responsibility Nicolette Ruimin Meyer.
Note Submitted to the Department of Earth System Science.
Thesis Thesis Ph.D. Stanford University 2022.
Location https://purl.stanford.edu/xj128bq8115

Access conditions

Copyright
© 2022 by Nicolette Ruimin Meyer
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 3.0 Unported license (CC BY-NC).

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