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Where microorganisms meet rocks in the Earth's Critical Zone

Biogeosciences, ISSN: 1726-4170, Vol: 8, Issue: 12, Page: 3531-3543
2011
  • 77
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 173
    Captures
  • 1
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    77
    • Citation Indexes
      76
    • Policy Citations
      1
      • Policy Citation
        1
  • Captures
    173
  • Mentions
    1
    • News Mentions
      1
      • News
        1

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Life Teems Below the Surface

Studying the Critical Zone • Critical Zone Science Comes of Age   • Life Teems Below the Surface   • Soil Signals Tell of Landscape Disturbances   • Demystifying Critical Zone Science to Make It More Inclusive   • Next Steps for the Critical Zone   Earth has skin. Like our own, Earth’s is a living, porous membrane with multiple layers and a complex structure that is vital for survival. Unlike ours

Article Description

The Critical Zone (CZ) is the Earth's outer shell where all the fundamental physical, chemical, and biological processes critical for sustaining life occur and interact. As microbes in the CZ drive many of these biogeochemical cycles, understanding their impact on life-sustaining processes starts with an understanding of their biodiversity. In this review, we summarize the factors controlling where terrestrial CZ microbes (prokaryotes and micro-eukaryotes) live and what is known about their diversity and function. Microbes are found throughout the CZ, down to 5 km below the surface, but their functional roles change with depth due to habitat complexity, e.g. variability in pore spaces, water, oxygen, and nutrients. Abundances of prokaryotes and micro-eukaryotes decrease from 10 or 10 cells g soil or rock , or ml water by up to eight orders of magnitude with depth. Although symbiotic mycorrhizal fungi and free-living decomposers have been studied extensively in soil habitats, where they occur up to 10 cells g soil , little is known regarding their identity or impact on weathering in the deep subsurface. The relatively low abundance of micro-eukaryotes in the deep subsurface suggests that they are limited in space, nutrients, are unable to cope with oxygen limitations, or some combination thereof. Since deep regions of the CZ have limited access to recent photosynthesis-derived carbon, microbes there depend on deposited organic material or a chemolithoautotrophic metabolism that allows for a complete food chain, independent from the surface, although limited energy flux means cell growth may take tens to thousands of years. Microbes are found in all regions of the CZ and can mediate important biogeochemical processes, but more work is needed to understand how microbial populations influence the links between different regions of the CZ and weathering processes. With the recent development of "omics" technologies, microbial ecologists have new methods that can be used to link the composition and function of in situ microbial communities. In particular, these methods can be used to search for new metabolic pathways that are relevant to biogeochemical nutrient cycling and determine how the activity of microorganisms can affect transport of carbon, particulates, and reactive gases between and within CZ regions.

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