Living Large in Microscopic Nooks - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 13
About This Presentation
Title:

Living Large in Microscopic Nooks

Description:

Alvin was used to place microbe free samples of natural seafloor rock onto t he seafloor. Alvin is capable of reaching depths of 13,000ft and holds a three man crew ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:66
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 14
Provided by: kri5
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Living Large in Microscopic Nooks


1
Living Large in Microscopic Nooks
  • Katrina Edwards
  • Associate Scientist
  • Marine Chemistry Geochemistry
  • Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
  • Oceanus 2004 42,2
  • Presented By Kristina Harris

2
Deep Sea Microbes
  • In the 1970s deep sea hydrothermal vents were
    discovered
  • Dissolved hydrogen, hydrogen sulfide and methane
    provide energy for microbes that live in these
    vent areas
  • In 2000, scientists set out to find bacteria that
    used solid minerals as their only source of energy

3
Methods
  • Alvin was used to place microbe free samples of
    natural seafloor rock onto t he seafloor
  • Alvin is capable of reaching depths of 13,000ft
    and holds a three man crew
  • Rocks were retrieved by Alvin and studied after
    two months on the sea floor

4
What Scientists found
  • Rusty-orange coating on the surface of the rocks
  • abundant pits and pores less than 20 microns
    (0.0004 inches) deep and wide
  • corkscrew-shaped stalks made of iron oxide (rust)

5
The Process
  • Microbes oxidize iron in the rocks
  • The rocks are then chemically altered
  • Microbes steal electrons from iron atoms in the
    rocks
  • Change from ferrous (Fe2) to ferric (FE3)
  • With the energy produced by this chemical
    reaction, they convert CO2 (from seawater) into
    organic matter

6
The Results
  • Oxygen loving microbes move into pits where they
    consume the avaliable oxygen
  • Seawater doesnt flow into these areas so the
    oxygen is not replenished
  • This creates an ideal environment for the iron
    loving microbes

7
The Results
  • As a by-product of the iron oxidizing process,
    iron-oxide stalks are produced
  • The stalks accumulate and maintain the low oxygen
    requirements of these microbes

8
The Results
  • The pits contain just enough oxygen from the
    seawater for the microbes to respire
  • Too much oxygen would oxidize all the iron in the
    rocks

9
What Now?
  • These microbes are very difficult to culture in
    the lab
  • Various species have been identified
  • Scientists are currently working on revealing the
    microbes metabolic pathways and biochemical
    machinery
  • Genes and the enzymes these microbes produce are
    also being investigated

10
What Now?
  • FeMO established to study microbes where they
    are diverse and prolific
  • FeMO Iron Oxidizing Microbe Observatory
  • Located at a submerged volcano named Loihi 25
    miles off the island of Hawaii

11
  • Iron oxide is visible on the seafloor on Loihi
    Seamount, an underwater active volcano
  • Whats next?

12
Geomicrobiology
  • A new area of study
  • look for unknown microbes that play major roles
    in cycling chemicals
  • rocks and minerals
  • planets and moon with iron rich rocks or soil
  • University of Wisconsin

13
New Questions
  • Analyzed assortment of holes drilled by the Ocean
    Drilling Program into volcanic rock on both side
    of the mid-ocean ridge mountain chain
  • older rocks depleted of Fe2 and full of Fe3
  • millions of square miles of habitat
  • Do these microbes have an influence on the
    chemistry of the ocean?
  • How have they altered the earths crust?
  • Were they pioneering life forms?
  • Does this large scale drawdown of CO2 from
    seawater help the ocean absorb carbon dioxide
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com