Dataset: Cyanobacteria cultures used to generate DNA reference library from samples collected from sites in Alpena and Monroe, Michigan and Palm Coast, Florida between May and June 2022.

Final no updates expectedDOI: 10.26008/1912/bco-dmo.911338.1Version 1 (2023-10-17)Dataset Type:experimental

Principal Investigator: Bopaiah Biddanda (Grand Valley State University)

Co-Principal Investigator: Dale Casamatta (University of North Florida)

Co-Principal Investigator: Sarah Hamsher (Grand Valley State University)

Student: Davis Fray (Grand Valley State University)

Student: Callahan McGovern (University of North Florida)

BCO-DMO Data Manager: Karen Soenen (Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution)


Project: Collaborative Research: RUI: OCE-BO: Tango in the Mat World: Biogeochemistry of diurnal vertical migration in microbial mats of Lake Huron’s sinkholes (Tango in the Mat World)


Abstract

These data are the information for each of the cultures generated from samples collected from three sites in Alpena, Michigan, one site in Monroe, Michigan, and one site in Palm Coast, Florida. Data are for cultures sequenced using Sanger sequencing and include taxonomic identification, location and sample type for samples used to develop the cultures. Each of these cultures was developed from high-sulfur, low-oxygen environments formed by underwater sinkholes and springs that create extreme ha...

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Mats from wadable sites were collected using a suction device and placed in sterile Whirlpak® bags, then put on ice for transport to the Annis Water Resources Institute (AWRI, Muskegon, MI, USA). Three replicate mat samples were collected from each habitat type at each site during each sampling event. Mats from MIS were collected by NOAA divers using a coring device, and transported to AWRI as cores in plastic tubes on ice. Plankton tow samples were also collected at GSS and ECB to determine taxa that may be considered part of the surrounding planktonic community, rather than active members of the microbial mat community. Each mat sample collected was subsampled, with one subsample used for generating unialgal cultures and the other for metabarcoding.

To isolate cyanobacterial taxa, mat samples were spread onto solid Z-8 medium (Rippka et al. 1988) and nitrogen-free Z-8 medium to isolate a wider range of cyanobacteria, and grown under ambient conditions (23 °C, ∼16:8 h light:dark photoperiod). Colonies were individually picked and plated until unialgal cultures were achieved. Morphology of the strains was analyzed via light microscopy (Nikon Eclipse Ni with DIC), and taxonomic identification was assessed using Wehr et al. (2015) and Komárek and Anagnostidis (2005). Images were taken with a high-resolution camera (Nikon digital sight DS-U3). Direct PCR was performed as follows: cells were placed into -20 °C for 30 mins, centrifuged, and the supernatant containing DNA collected. The partial 16S rRNA and the whole 16S–23S ITS region (Gaylarde et al. 2004) was amplified using primers CYA8F and CYAB23R (Neilan et al. 1997). The 50 µL PCR reaction contained: 27 µL DNA containing supernatant, 0.5 µL of each primer (0.01 mM concentration), and 22 µL PCR Master Mix (Promega, Madison, WI, USA). PCR amplification proceeded as detailed in Casamatta et al. (2005), and products were frozen and sent to Eurofins Scientific (Louisville, Kentucky) for Sanger sequencing.


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Results

In prep: Callahan McGovern, Davis Fray, Sarah Hamsher, Bopaiah Biddanda, and Dale Casamatta. Multi-marker metabarcoding reveals unexpected diversity of microbial mats in low-oxygen, high-sulfur springs in the Lake Huron basin.
Results

In prep: Davis Fray, Callahan McGovern, Dale Casamatta, Bopaiah Biddanda, and Sarah Hamsher. Life in the Extreme: Metabarcoding reveals increased diversity and evidence of biogeographic influence in microbial mats from low-oxygen, high-sulfur springs.
Methods

Casamatta, D. A., Johansen, J. R., Vis, M. L., & Broadwater, S. T. (2005). MOLECULAR AND MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION OF TEN POLAR AND NEAR‐POLAR STRAINS WITHIN THE OSCILLATORIALES (CYANOBACTERIA)1. Journal of Phycology, 41(2), 421–438. Portico. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1529-8817.2005.04062.x
Methods

Gaylarde, C. C., Gaylarde, P. M., Copp, J., & Neilan, B. (2004). Polyphasic Detection of Cyanobacteria in Terrestrial Biofilms. Biofouling, 20(2), 71–79. https://doi.org/10.1080/08927010410001681237
Methods

Komárek J, Anagnostidis K (2005) “Cyanoprokaryota; Oscillatoriales” in in Süßwasserflora von Mitteleuropa, Book 19/2. Elsevier/Spektrum, Heidelberg, Germany.