Article
Tropical aquatic Archaea show environment-specific community composition
Registro en:
SILVEIRA, C. B. et al. Tropical aquatic Archaea show environment-specific community composition. Plos One, v. 8, n. 9, e76321, 2013.
1932-6203
Autor
Silveira, Cynthia Barbosa da
Cardoso, Alexander Machado
Coutinho, Felipe Hernandes
Lima, Joyce Lemos
Pinto, Leonardo Henriques
Albano, Rodolpho Mattos
Clementino, Maysa Beatriz Mandetta
Martins, Orlando Bonifácio
Vieira, Ricardo Pilz
Resumen
The Archaea domain is ubiquitously distributed and extremely diverse, however, environmental factors that shape archaeal community structure are not well known. Aquatic environments, including the water column and sediments harbor many new uncultured archaeal species from which metabolic and ecological roles remain elusive. Some environments are especially neglected in terms of archaeal diversity, as is the case of pristine tropical areas. Here we investigate the archaeal composition in marine and freshwater systems from Ilha Grande, a South Atlantic tropical environment. All sampled habitats showed high archaeal diversity. No OTUs were shared between freshwater, marine and mangrove sediment samples, yet these environments are interconnected and geographically close, indicating environment-specific community structuring. Group II Euryarchaeota was the main clade in marine samples, while the new putative phylum Thaumarchaeota and LDS/RCV Euryarchaeota dominated freshwaters. Group III Euryarchaeota, a rare clade, was also retrieved in reasonable abundance in marine samples. The archaeal community from mangrove sediments was composed mainly by members of mesophilic Crenarchaeota and by a distinct clade forming a sister-group to Crenarchaeota and Thaumarchaeota. Our results show strong environment-specific community structuring in tropical aquatic Archaea, as previously seen for Bacteria.