A microscopic approach to investigate bacteria under in-situ conditions in Arctic Lake ice: Initial comparisons to sea ice

被引:0
|
作者
Junge, K
Deming, JW
Eicken, H
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Astrobiol Program, Sch Oceanog, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[2] Univ Alaska Fairbanks, Inst Geophys, Fairbanks, AK 99775 USA
来源
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
To better understand constraints on bacteria at extremely low temperatures in ice, we describe here the adaptation of methods previously developed for sea ice to high magnification imaging of bacteria within fluid inclusions of Arctic lake ice under insitu conditions. Bacterial staining procedures, using the DNA-specific fluorescent stain DAPI, epifluorescence microscopy and image analysis were applied to lake-ice sections at in situ temperature (-5degreesC). Abundances of total, attached, free-living and metabolically active lake-ice bacteria were also determined from samples melted at 0degreesC using the fluorescent stains DAPI and CTC. Initial results indicate that, compared to sea ice at the same in situ temperature, lake ice contains fewer and more isolated liquid inclusions, limiting transport of fluids and motion of bacteria. Metabolically active cells were found in all ice samples (0.1 to 2.0% of the total counts), but on average less than in sea ice. Up to 50% of the total bacterial community were found to be associated with particles > 3 mum in size; of the metabolically active cells, a smaller fraction may be attached than in sea ice. Our results expand the spectrum of information available on bacteria in ice on a scale relevant to the organism and provide insight into characteristics of frozen microbial habitats on Earth and perhaps elsewhere in the Universe.
引用
收藏
页码:381 / 388
页数:8
相关论文
共 38 条
  • [31] Could offspring predation offset the successful reproduction of the arctic copepod Calanus hyperboreus under reduced sea-ice cover conditions?
    Darnis, Gerald
    Wold, Anette
    Falk-Petersen, Stig
    Graeve, Martin
    Fortier, Louis
    PROGRESS IN OCEANOGRAPHY, 2019, 170 : 107 - 118
  • [32] On the turbulent heat fluxes: A comparison among satellite-based estimates, atmospheric reanalyses, and in-situ observations during the winter climate over Arctic sea ice
    Zhang, Zhi-Lun
    Hui, Feng-Ming
    Vihma, Timo
    Granskog, Mats A.
    Cheng, Bin
    Chen, Zhuo-Qi
    Cheng, Xiao
    ADVANCES IN CLIMATE CHANGE RESEARCH, 2023, 14 (03) : 347 - 362
  • [33] Living conditions, abundance and biomass of under-ice fauna in the Storfjord area (western Barents Sea, Arctic) in late winter (March 2003)
    Iris Werner
    Polar Biology, 2005, 28 : 311 - 318
  • [34] Living conditions, abundance and biomass of under-ice fauna in the Storfjord area (western Barents Sea, Arctic) in late winter (March 2003)
    Werner, I
    POLAR BIOLOGY, 2005, 28 (04) : 311 - 318
  • [35] Interannual variation of the Warm Arctic–Cold Eurasia pattern modulated by Ural blocking and the North Atlantic Oscillation under changing sea ice conditions
    Xiling Zhou
    Tomonori Sato
    Shixue Li
    Progress in Earth and Planetary Science, 10
  • [36] Radiogenic isotope (Nd, Pb, Sr) signatures of surface and sea ice-transported sediments from the Arctic Ocean under the present interglacial conditions
    Maccali, Jenny
    Hillaire-Marcel, Claude
    Not, Christelle
    POLAR RESEARCH, 2018, 37
  • [37] Interannual variation of the Warm Arctic-Cold Eurasia pattern modulated by Ural blocking and the North Atlantic Oscillation under changing sea ice conditions
    Zhou, Xiling
    Sato, Tomonori
    Li, Shixue
    PROGRESS IN EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE, 2023, 10 (01)
  • [38] Dynamic collapse and regrowth of the Antarctic Ice Sheet in the Weddell Sea sector during the middle Miocene: A novel multi-proxy sedimentary provenance approach using in-situ 87Rb/87Sr dating of detrital K-feldspar
    Neofitu, Roland
    Mark, Chris
    O'Connell, Suzanne
    Zack, Thomas
    Rosel, Delia
    Mark, Darren
    Barfod, Dan
    Flowerdew, Michael J.
    Kelley, Samuel
    Daly, J. Stephen
    EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2024, 641