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Crustal fluid and ash alteration impacts on the biosphere of Shikoku Basin sediments, Nankai Trough, Japan
journal contribution
posted on 2015-11-01, 00:00 authored by M E Torres, T Cox, W-L Hong, J McManus, J C Sample, C Destrigneville, Han Ming Gan, H Y Gan, J W MoreauWe present data from sediment cores collected from IODP Site C0012 in the Shikoku Basin. Our site lies at the Nankai Trough, just prior to subduction of the 19 Ma Philippine Sea plate. Our data indicate that the sedimentary package is undergoing multiple routes of electron transport and that these differing pathways for oxidant supply generate a complex array of metabolic routes and microbial communities involved in carbon cycling. Numerical simulations matched to pore water data document that Ca(2+) and Cl(1-) are largely supplied via diffusion from a high-salinity (44.5 psu) basement fluid, which supports the presence of halophile Archean communities within the deep sedimentary package that are not observed in shallow sediments. Sulfate supply from basement supports anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) at a rate of ~0.2 pmol cm(-3) day(-1) at ~400 mbsf. We also note the disappearance of δ-Proteobacteria at 434 mbsf, coincident with the maximum in methane concentration, and their reappearance at 463 mbsf, coinciding with the observed deeper increase in sulfate concentration toward the basement. We did not, however, find ANME representatives in any of the samples analyzed (from 340 to 463 mbsf). The lack of ANME may be due to an overshadowing effect from the more dominant archaeal phylotypes or may indicate involvement of unknown groups of archaea in AOM (i.e., unclassified Euryarchaeota). In addition to the supply of sulfate from a basement aquifer, the deep biosphere at this site is also influenced by an elevated supply of reactive iron (up to 143 μmol g(-1)) and manganese (up to 20 μmol g(-1)). The effect of these metal oxides on the sulfur cycle is inferred from an accompanying sulfur isotope fractionation much smaller than expected from traditional sulfate-reducing pathways. The detection of the manganese- and iron-reducer γ-Proteobacteria Alteromonas at 367 mbsf is consistent with these geochemical inferences.
History
Journal
GeobiologyVolume
13Issue
6Pagination
562 - 580Publisher
Wiley-BlackwellLocation
Chichester, Eng.Publisher DOI
eISSN
1472-4669Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2015, Wiley-BlackwellUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
ArchaeaBacteriaBiodiversityDNA, ArchaealDNA, BacterialEnvironmentGeologic SedimentsPacific OceanPolymerase Chain ReactionRNA, Ribosomal, 16SScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicinePhysical SciencesBiologyEnvironmental SciencesGeosciences, MultidisciplinaryLife Sciences & Biomedicine - Other TopicsEnvironmental Sciences & EcologyGeologyANAEROBIC METHANE OXIDATIONBACTERIAL SULFATE REDUCTIONSUBSEAFLOOR SEDIMENTSOCEANIC-CRUSTMICROBIAL COMMUNITIESELEMENTAL SULFURTRANSITION ZONEORGANIC-MATTERREACTIVE IRONSEAGeochemistryGeologyEcology