214 research outputs found
Winter accumulation of methane and its variable timing of release from thermokarst lakes in subarctic peatlands.
Previous studies of thermokarst lakes have drawn attention to the potential for accumulationof CH4under the ice and its subsequent release in spring; however, such observations have not beenavailable for thermokarst waters in carbonârich peatlands. Here we undertook a winter proïŹling of ïŹveblackâwater lakes located on eroding permafrost peatlands in subarctic Quebec for comparison with summerproïŹles and used a 2âyear data set of automated water temperature, conductivity, and oxygenmeasurements to evaluate how the annual mixing dynamics may affect the venting of greenhouse gases tothe atmosphere. All of the sampled lakes contained large amounts of dissolved CH4under their winter icecover. These subâice concentrations were up to 5 orders of magnitude above air equilibrium (i.e., theexpected concentration in lake water equilibrated with the atmosphere), resulting in calculated emissionrates at ice breakup that would be 1â2 orders of magnitude higher than midsummer averages. The amount ofCO2dissolved in the water column was reduced in winter, and the estimated ratio of potential diffusive CO2to CH4emission in spring was half the measured summer ratio, suggesting a seasonal shift inmethanogenesis and bacterial activity. All surface lake ice contained bubbles of CH4and CO2, but thisamounted to <5% of the total amount of the dissolved CH4and CO2in the corresponding lake water column.The continuous logging records suggested that lake morphometry may play a role in controlling the timingand extent of CH4and CO2release from the water column to the atmosphere
Benthic Cyanobacterial Mats in the High Arctic: Multi-Layer Structure and Fluorescence Responses to Osmotic Stress
Cyanobacterial mats are often a major biological component of extreme aquatic ecosystems, and in polar lakes and streams they may account for the dominant fraction of total ecosystem biomass and productivity. In this study we examined the vertical structure and physiology of Arctic microbial mats relative to the question of how these communities may respond to ongoing environmental change. The mats were sampled from Ward Hunt Lake (83°5.297âČN, 74°9.985âČW) at the northern coast of Arctic Canada, and were composed of three visibly distinct layers. Microsensor profiling showed that there were strong gradients in oxygen within each layer, with an overall decrease from 100% saturation at the mat surface to 0%, at the bottom, accompanied by an increase of 0.6 pH units down the profile. Gene clone libraries (16S rRNA) revealed the presence of Oscillatorian sequences throughout the mat, while Nostoc related species dominated the two upper layers, and Nostocales and Synechococcales sequences were common in the bottom layer. High performance liquid chromatography analyses showed a parallel gradient in pigments, from high concentrations of UV-screening scytonemin in the upper layer to increasing zeaxanthin and myxoxanthin in the bottom layer, and an overall shift from photoprotective to photosynthetic carotenoids down the profile. Climate change is likely to be accompanied by lake level fluctuations and evaporative concentration of salts, and thus increased osmotic stress of the littoral mat communities. To assess the cellular capacity to tolerate increasing osmolarity on physiology and cell membrane integrity, mat sections were exposed to a gradient of increasing salinities, and PAM measurements of in vivo chlorophyll fluorescence were made to assess changes in maximum quantum yield. The results showed that the mats were tolerant of up to a 46-fold increase in salinity. These features imply that cyanobacterial mats are resilient to ongoing climate change, and that in the absence of major biological perturbations, these vertically structured communities will continue to be a prominent feature of polar aquatic ecosystems
Water column gradients beneath the summer ice of a High Arctic freshwater lake as indicators of sensitivity to climate change
Ice cover persists throughout summer over many lakes at extreme polar latitudes but is likely to become increasingly rare with ongoing climate change. Here we addressed the question of how summer ice-cover affects the underlying water column of Ward Hunt Lake, a freshwater lake in the Canadian High Arctic, with attention to its vertical gradients in limnological properties that would be disrupted by ice loss. Profiling in the deepest part of the lake under thick mid-summer ice revealed a high degree of vertical structure, with gradients in temperature, conductivity and dissolved gases. Dissolved oxygen, nitrous oxide, carbon dioxide and methane rose with depth to concentrations well above air-equilibrium, with oxygen values at >150% saturation in a mid water column layer of potential convective mixing. Fatty acid signatures of the seston also varied with depth. Benthic microbial mats were the dominant phototrophs, growing under a dim green light regime controlled by the ice cover, water itself and weakly colored dissolved organic matter that was mostly autochthonous in origin. In this and other polar lakes, future loss of mid-summer ice will completely change many water column properties and benthic light conditions, resulting in a markedly different ecosystem regime
Genomic evidence of functional diversity in DPANN archaea, from oxic species to anoxic vampiristic consortia
DPANN archaea account for half of the archaeal diversity of the biosphere, but with few cultivated representatives, their metabolic potential and environmental functions are poorly understood. The extreme geochemical and environmental conditions in meromictic ice-capped Lake A, in the Canadian High Arctic, provided an isolated, stratified model ecosystem to resolve the distribution and metabolism of uncultured aquatic DPANN archaea living across extreme redox and salinity gradients, from freshwater oxygenated conditions, to saline, anoxic, sulfidic waters. We recovered 28 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of DPANN archaea that provided genetic insights into their ecological function. Thiosulfate oxidation potential was detected in aerobic Woesearchaeota, whereas diverse metabolic functions were identified in anaerobic DPANN archaea, including degradation and fermentation of cellular compounds, and sulfide and polysulfide reduction. We also found evidence for âvampiristicâ metabolism in several MAGs, with genes coding for pore-forming toxins, peptidoglycan degradation, and RNA scavenging. The vampiristic MAGs co-occurred with other DPANNs having complementary metabolic capacities, leading to the possibility that DPANN form interspecific consortia that recycle microbial carbon, nutrients and complex molecules through a DPANN archaeal shunt, adding hidden novel complexity to anaerobic microbial food webs
Size-fractionated microbiome structure in subarctic rivers and a coastal plume across DOC and salinity gradients
Little is known about the microbial diversity of rivers that flow across the changing subarctic
landscape. Using amplicon sequencing (rRNA and rRNA genes) combined with HPLC
pigment analysis and physicochemical measurements, we investigated the diversity of
two size fractions of planktonic Bacteria, Archaea and microbial eukaryotes along
environmental gradients in the Great Whale River (GWR), Canada. This large subarctic
river drains an extensive watershed that includes areas of thawing permafrost, and
discharges into southeastern Hudson Bay as an extensive plume that gradually mixes
with the coastal marine waters. The microbial communities differed by size-fraction
(separated with a 3-ÎŒm filter), and clustered into three distinct environmental groups: (1)
the GWR sites throughout a 150-km sampling transect; (2) the GWR plume in Hudson
Bay; and (3) small rivers that flow through degraded permafrost landscapes. There was
a downstream increase in taxonomic richness along the GWR, suggesting that
sub-catchment inputs influence microbial community structure in the absence of sharp
environmental gradients. Microbial community structure shifted across the salinity gradient
within the plume, with changes in taxonomic composition and diversity. Rivers flowing
through degraded permafrost had distinct physicochemical and microbiome characteristics,
with allochthonous dissolved organic carbon explaining part of the variation in community
structure. Finally, our analyses of the core microbiome indicated that while a substantial
part of all communities consisted of generalists, most taxa had a more limited environmental
range and may therefore be sensitive to ongoing change
Vegetation shadow casts impact remotely sensed reflectance from permafrost thaw ponds in the subarctic forest-tundra zone
Thermokarst lakes and ponds are a common landscape feature resulting from permafrost thaw, but their intense greenhouse
gas emissions are still poorly constrained as a feedback mechanism for global warming because of their diversity, abundance,
and remoteness. Thermokarst waterbodies may be small and optically diverse, posing specifc challenges for optical remote
sensing regarding detection, classifcation, and monitoring. This is especially relevant when accounting for external factors that afect water refectance, such as scattering and vegetation shadow casts. In this study, we evaluated the efects of
shadowing across optically diverse waterbodies located in the forestâtundra zone of northern Canada. We used ultra-high
spatial resolution multispectral data and digital surface models obtained from unmanned aerial systems for modeling and
analyzing shadow efects on water refectance at Earth Observation satellite overpass time. Our results show that shadowing
causes variations in refectance, reducing the usable area of remotely sensed pixels for waterbody analysis in small lakes
and ponds. The efects were greater on brighter and turbid inorganic thermokarst lakes embedded in post-glacial siltâclay
marine deposits and littoral sands, where the mean refectance decrease was from -51 to -70%, depending on the wavelength.
These efects were also dependent on lake shape and vegetation height and were amplifed in the cold season due to low
solar elevations. Remote sensing will increasingly play a key role in assessing thermokarst lake responses and feedbacks
to global change, and this study shows the magnitude and sources of optical variations caused by shading that need to be
considered in future analyses.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Chlorovirus and myovirus diversity in permafrost thaw ponds
Permafrost thaw ponds occur in high abundance across the northern landscape of Canada and are sites of intense microbial activity, resulting
in carbon dioxide and methane emissions to the atmosphere. In this study, we focused on viruses as largely unstudied agents of top-down control in
these high-latitude microbial ecosystems. Specifically, we compared the diversity of myovirus, chlorovirus and host microbial communities in an
organic soil palsa valley pond and a mineral soil lithalsa valley pond. These 2 subarctic permafrost landscapes are both common in northern Québec,
Canada. Sequence analysis of ribosomal small subunit RNA genes showed that the community structure of bacteria and microbial eukaryotes
differed significantly between the 2 ponds, which both differed from microbial communities in a rock-basin lake (whose formation was not related
to permafrost thawing and which we used as a reference pond) in the same region. The viral assemblages included 439 OTUs in the uncultured
Myoviridae category and 41 OTUs in the family Phycodnaviridae. Phylogenetic analysis of the latter based on an amino acid sequence alignment
revealed a single large clade related to chloroviruses, consistent with the abundant presence of chlorophytes in these waters. As there was for the
bacterial and eukaryotic communi-ties, there were also significant differences in the community structure of these viral groups among the 3 ponds.
These results suggest that host community composition is influenced by environmental filtering, which in turn contributes to driving viral diversity
across landscape types
The littoral zone of polar lakes : inshore-offshore contrasts in an ice-covered High Arctic lake
In ice-covered polar lakes, a narrow ice-free moat opens up in spring or early summer, and then
persists at the edge of the lake until complete ice loss or refreezing. In this study, we analyzed the
horizontal gradients in Ward Hunt Lake, located in the High Arctic, and addressed the hypothesis
that the transition from its nearshore open-water moat to offshore ice-covered waters is marked
by discontinuous shifts in limnological properties. Consistent with this hypothesis, we observed
an abrupt increase in below-ice concentrations of chlorophyll a beyond the ice margin, along with
a sharp decrease in temperature and light availability and pronounced changes in benthic algal
pigments and fatty acids. There were higher concentrations of rotifers and lower concentrations
of viruses at the ice-free sampling sites, and contrasts in zooplankton fatty acid profiles that
implied a greater importance of benthic phototrophs in their inshore diet. The observed patterns
underscore the structuring role of ice cover in polar lakes. These ecosystems do not conform to
the traditional definitions of littoral versus pelagic zones, but instead may have distinct moat, icemargin
and ice-covered zones. This zonation is likely to weaken with ongoing climate change
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