Epilithic and endolithic microorganisms and deterioration on stone church facades subject to urban pollution in a sub-tropical climate

Abstract

<p>Weathering of two church facades in Rio de Janeiro was caused substantially by salts, mainly halite and gypsum, detected by SEM and chemical analyses, which cause physical stresses by deposition within the rock. Biofilm populations, determined by SEM and as operational taxonomic units (OTUs), degraded stone by penetration, solubilization and redeposition of minerals on their surfaces. Endolithic cyanobacteria were associated with gypsum deposits. Microbiomes were typical for high-stress environments, high salt, intense insolation, low water and low nutrients (eg halophilic <i>Rubrobacter</i>, <i>Salinicola</i>, <i>Sterigmatomyces</i>). The main colonizers on the church most affected by traffic (Nossa Senhora da Candelária – CA) were Actinobacteria; Gammaproteobacteria (chiefly <i>Pseudomonas</i>) were predominant on the site situated in a leafy square (São Francisco de Paula – SF). Major Gammaproteobacteria on CA were halophilic <i>Halomonas</i> and Rhodobacteriaceae. Fungal OTUs on both churches were principally dimorphic, yeast-like basidiomycetes. Many OTUs of thermophilic microorganisms (eg the Thermomicrobia class, Chloroflexi) were present. This is the first use of next generation sequencing (NGS) to study microbial biofilm interactions with metamorphic and granite buildings in an intensely urban, sub-tropical climate.</p

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Last time updated on 12/02/2018

This paper was published in FigShare.

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