NSF Award Abstract:
The vast majority of deep seafloor sediments are inhabited by microbial communities that survive under extreme energy limitation, with apparent generation times of centuries to millennia. Hydrothermal systems are a stark contrast to these energy-starved environments and may represent important, high-activity, 'population centers' in the oceanic subsurface. When rocks from the Earth's mantle are uplifted and exposed to water, the resulting reactions lead to acidic fluids with high concentrations of hydrogen. Under certain circumstances, small organic molecules such as methane can also form in the absence of biology. These compounds can provide energy to subseafloor microbial communities and, given the ubiquity of mantle rocks, such reactions may fuel a significant proportion of the active subsurface biosphere. The current project will characterize the microbial communities inhabiting an iconic example of this type of system, the Lost City Hydrothermal Field, using a remotely operated vehicle. The ghostly spires of Lost City are highly telegenic and have been featured in professional documentaries. The high definition underwater video footage collected during the expedition will provide the raw material for an 8 week educational training program in digital media focused on kindergarten through 12th grade high school students and undergraduate students. The resulting short documentaries will be published on YouTube and the Utah Education Network.
Mantle rocks comprise significant portions of the seafloor, and microbial communities hosted within them may be important mediators of carbon and energy exchange between the deep Earth and the surface biosphere. Upon tectonic uplift and exposure to water, the serpentinization of these materials releases potential energy in the form of hydrogen, methane, and heat, and further reaction of these products can sustain the abiogenic synthesis of small organic molecules. Recent studies have highlighted, however, the lack of alkalithermophiles that are capable of survival at the high pH (9-11) and elevated temperatures found in these systems. The almost complete lack of carbon dioxide (CO2) represents a second, and possibly more significant, limitation to growth. To better understand the extent of the serpentinite subsurface, this project will address the question: What limits biological activity in the serpentinite subsurface? Specifically, the proposed work will test the hypotheses: (1) microbial diversity spans a wider range of temperature-pH conditions than currently recognized and (2) the scarcity of CO2 is a key biological limitation to serpentinization-driven ecosystems that can be overcome by the metabolic activity of one or a few foundation species. These hypotheses will be tested during a 20 day (10 days on site) expedition to the Lost City Hydrothermal Field, focusing on fluids as windows to the subsurface biosphere. The sampling approach will capitalize on the differences in temperature, carbon availability, and microbial activity across the field. The analytical approach will integrate multidisciplinary techniques performed on replicate subsamples and feature the application of next-generation sequencing technologies to these marine serpentinizing fluids for the first time. This study will generate extensive sequence data from environmental DNA, environmental mRNA, and single-cell genomes, allowing us to identify the in situ expression of metabolic pathways and the genomics of active single cells. These efforts will be closely linked with a thorough characterization of carbon in these fluids that will focus on identifying available substrates (e.g. methane, CO2, organic acids) and on characterizing biomarkers that reflect specific metabolic pathways (e.g. lipids, amino acids).
Dataset | Latest Version Date | Current State |
---|---|---|
Lost City hydrothermal fluids sequence data from R/V Atlantis AT42-01 in the Lost City hydrothermal field from September to October 2018 (Lost City Limits to Life project) | 2023-06-27 | Preliminary and in progress |
Radiochemistry data for rocks and deposits from the Lost City Hydrothermal Field at the Atlantis Massif from 2018-2020 | 2022-01-04 | Final no updates expected |
Radiochemistry data for fluids sampled from the Lost City Hydrothermal Field at the Atlantis Massif in 2018 | 2021-11-15 | Final no updates expected |
Samples collected and their associated temperatures on an expedition to the Lost City hydrothermal field on R/V Atlantis cruise AT42-01 in September 2018 | 2020-03-25 | Final no updates expected |
Principal Investigator: Susan Q. Lang
University of South Carolina at Columbia
Co-Principal Investigator: William Brazelton
University of Utah
Co-Principal Investigator: Gretchen Fruh-Green
ETH-Zurich (ETH)
Co-Principal Investigator: Deborah Kelley
University of Washington (UW)
Co-Principal Investigator: Marvin Lilley
University of Washington (UW)
Contact: Susan Q. Lang
University of South Carolina at Columbia
Data Management Plan received by BCO-DMO on 12 September 2016 (162.80 KB)
09/12/2016