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Journal ArticleDOI

Is the CH 4 , H 2 and CO venting from submarine hydrothermal systems produced by thermophilic bacteria?

John A. Baross, +2 more
- 22 Jul 1982 - 
- Vol. 298, Iss: 5872, pp 366-368
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TLDR
In this article, the authors found that the super-heated waters emanating from sulphide chimneys at 21 °N along the East Pacific Rise and samples from the sulphide smokehouse themselves harbor complex communities of bacteria capable of growing with generation times of 37-65 min, producing CH4, CO, H2 and traces of N2O in media containing S2O2−3, Mn2+ and Fe2+ as energy sources, and oxidizing CH4 at 100 ± 2 °C at 1 atm.
Abstract
Submarine hydrothermal vents are a major source of methane to the oceans1,2 The methane, as well as H2 and CO, are generally believed to result from degassing of the mantle or from abiogenic water–rock reactions1, a conclusion supported by direct correlations between 3He and CH4, and generally between CH4, H2 and CO and dissolved silicate in hydrothermal waters2,3 An alternative source for these gases might be microbiological This would imply that active bacterial communities exist in deep-sea hot water environments, some of which have temperatures exceeding 100 °C; this inference is without precedent We have now found that the super-heated waters emanating from sulphide chimneys at 21 °N along the East Pacific Rise and samples from the sulphide chimneys themselves harbour complex communities of bacteria capable of growing with generation times of 37–65 min, producing CH4, CO, H2 and traces of N2O in media containing S2O2−3, Mn2+ and Fe2+ as energy sources, and oxidizing CH4, at 100 ± 2 °C at 1 atm These microbial communities consist of three to five morphologically distinct types and include both oxidative and anaerobic species These mixed cultures will not grow at temperatures below 70–75 °C Even though some of the communities originated from water of temperatures >300 °C, it is not known if they can grow and produce CH4, CO and H2 in super-heated waters kept liquid due to hydrostatic pressure The discovery of these obligately thermophilic, gas-producing and consuming bacterial communities associated with submarine volcanic environments has interesting and important implications for prokaryotic evolution, marine geochemistry, industrial microbiology and exobiology

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Geomicrobiology of Deep-Sea Hydrothermal Vents

TL;DR: Bacteria grow most abundantly in the shallow crust where upwelling hot, reducing hydrothermal fluid mixes with downwelling cold, oxygenated seawater, but the predominant production of biomass is the result of symbiotic associations between chemolithotrophic bacteria and certain invertebrates, which have also been found in Cretaceous sulfide ores of ophiolite deposits.
Journal ArticleDOI

Methanococcus jannaschii sp. nov., an extremely thermophilic methanogen from a submarine hydrothermal vent

TL;DR: The isolation of M. jannaschii from a submarine hydrothermal vent provides additional evidence for biogenic production of CH4 from these deep-sea environments and a new species of the genus Methanococcus is proposed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond the Calvin cycle: autotrophic carbon fixation in the ocean.

TL;DR: Recent discoveries in the field of autotrophic carbon fixation are reviewed, including the biochemistry and evolution of the different pathways, as well as their ecological relevance in various oceanic ecosystems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Submarine hydrothermal vents and associated gradient environments as sites for the origin and evolution of life

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors expand upon the geophysical, chemical, and possible microbiological analogies between contemporary and Archean hydrothermal systems and suggest several hypotheses, related to their model for the origin and evolution of life at Archean vents, which can be tested in present-day hydrothermic systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemical constraints on chemolithoautotrophic metabolism by microorganisms in seafloor hydrothermal systems

TL;DR: The model indicates that mixing environments are favorable for oxidation of H2S, CH4, Fe2+ and Mn2+ only below approximately 38 degrees C, with methanogenesis and reduction of sulfate or S degrees favored at higher temperatures, suggesting that environments dominated by mixing provide habitats for mesophilic (but not thermophilic) aerobes and thermophile anaerobes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Generic assignments, strain histories, and properties of pure cultures of cyanobacteria

TL;DR: Revisions are designed to permit the generic identification of cultures, often difficult through use of the field-based system of phycological classification, and are both constant and readily determinable in cultured material.
Journal ArticleDOI

Submarine Thermal Springs on the Galápagos Rift

TL;DR: It is suggested that two-thirds of the heat lost from new oceanic lithosphere at the Gal�pagos Rift in the first million years may be vented from thermal springs, predominantly along the axial ridge within the rift valley.
BookDOI

Thermophilic microorganisms and life at high temperatures

TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the effect of temperature on physical and chemical parameters of the organisms in the Hot Springs of Yellowstone National Park in the US and found that there is an upper temperature limit for life.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermophilic micro-organisms and life at high temperatures

Alan J. Brook
- 01 Dec 1980 - 
TL;DR: In this article, the authors studied the effect of temperature on physical and chemical parameters of the organisms in the Hot Springs of Yellowstone National Park in the US and found that there is an upper temperature limit for life.
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