4.6 Article

Islands Within Islands: Bacterial Phylogenetic Structure and Consortia in Hawaiian Lava Caves and Fumaroles

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FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.934708

关键词

lava caves; fumaroles; taxonomic distinctness; networks; cave microbiology; microbial consortia; volcanic environments

资金

  1. NASA Exobiology grant [80NSSC18K1064]
  2. University Facilitating Funds from George Washington University
  3. NASA Exobiology Program [80NSSC18K1064]
  4. NSF Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Biology [1711856]
  5. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research Division [LANLF59T]
  6. George Washington University
  7. University of Hawai'i at Manoa

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Lava caves, tubes, and fumaroles in Hawai'i have unique bacterial communities with little overlap between different caves or sites. Older lava tubes have higher phylogenetic diversity compared to younger or geothermally active sites. Competitive exclusion is the main driver in structuring the bacterial communities in Hawaiian volcanic environments.
Lava caves, tubes, and fumaroles in Hawai'i present a range of volcanic, oligotrophic environments from different lava flows and host unexpectedly high levels of bacterial diversity. These features provide an opportunity to study the ecological drivers that structure bacterial community diversity and assemblies in volcanic ecosystems and compare the older, more stable environments of lava tubes, to the more variable and extreme conditions of younger, geothermally active caves and fumaroles. Using 16S rRNA amplicon-based sequencing methods, we investigated the phylogenetic distinctness and diversity and identified microbial interactions and consortia through co-occurrence networks in 70 samples from lava tubes, geothermal lava caves, and fumaroles on the island of Hawai'i. Our data illustrate that lava caves and geothermal sites harbor unique microbial communities, with very little overlap between caves or sites. We also found that older lava tubes (500-800 yrs old) hosted greater phylogenetic diversity (Faith's PD) than sites that were either geothermally active or younger (<400 yrs old). Geothermally active sites had a greater number of interactions and complexity than lava tubes. Average phylogenetic distinctness, a measure of the phylogenetic relatedness of a community, was higher than would be expected if communities were structured at random. This suggests that bacterial communities of Hawaiian volcanic environments are phylogenetically over-dispersed and that competitive exclusion is the main driver in structuring these communities. This was supported by network analyses that found that taxa (Class level) co-occurred with more distantly related organisms than close relatives, particularly in geothermal sites. Network hubs (taxa of potentially higher ecological importance) were not the most abundant taxa in either geothermal sites or lava tubes and were identified as unknown families or genera of the phyla, Chloroflexi and Acidobacteria. These results highlight the need for further study on the ecological role of microbes in caves through targeted culturing methods, metagenomics, and long-read sequence technologies.

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