Abstract

The flanking regions of Guaymas Basin, a young marginal rift basin located in the Gulf of California, are covered with thick sediment layers that are hydrothermally altered due to magmatic intrusions. To explore environmental controls on microbial community structure in this complex environment, we analyzed site- and depth-related patterns of microbial community composition (bacteria, archaea, and fungi) in hydrothermally influenced sediments with different thermal conditions, geochemical regimes, and extent of microbial mats. We compared communities in hot hydrothermal sediments (75-100°C at ~40 cm depth) covered by orange-pigmented Beggiatoaceae mats in the Cathedral Hill area, temperate sediments (25-30°C at ~40 cm depth) covered by yellow sulfur precipitates and filamentous sulfur oxidizers at the Aceto Balsamico location, hot sediments (>115°C at ~40 cm depth) with orange-pigmented mats surrounded by yellow and white mats at the Marker 14 location, and background, non-hydrothermal sediments (3.8°C at ~45 cm depth) overlain with ambient seawater. Whereas bacterial and archaeal communities are clearly structured by site-specific in-situ thermal gradients and geochemical conditions, fungal communities are generally structured by sediment depth. Unexpectedly, chytrid sequence biosignatures are ubiquitous in surficial sediments whereas deeper sediments contain diverse yeasts and filamentous fungi. In correlation analyses across different sites and sediment depths, fungal phylotypes correlate to each other to a much greater degree than Bacteria and Archaea do to each other or to fungi, further substantiating that site-specific in-situ thermal gradients and geochemical conditions that control bacteria and archaea do not extend to fungi.

Highlights

  • In the Guaymas Basin spreading center, located in the central Gulf of California, hydrothermally influenced sediments are characterized by steep thermal gradients that may reach the thermal limits of life in just a few centimeters depth [1, 2]

  • The Cathedral Hill area was targeted for push-core sampling of hightemperature microbial mats by submersible Alvin

  • The establishment and structuring of cohabitating prokaryotic and fungal communities in Guaymas Basin surficial sediments respond to fundamentally different environmental cues

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Summary

Introduction

In the Guaymas Basin spreading center, located in the central Gulf of California, hydrothermally influenced sediments are characterized by steep thermal gradients that may reach the thermal limits of life in just a few centimeters depth [1, 2]. Previous works in Guaymas Basin have explored the ecophysiology and genomics of mat-building filamentous sulfur-oxidizing Beggiatoaceae lineages [8,9,10,11,12,13], and investigated the effects of high temperature and hydrothermally influenced geochemistry as local ecological constraints on microbial community structure in the underlying sediments [14, 15] These sediments harbor complex anaerobic microbial communities, including diverse methanogens [16], thermophilic or thermotolerant archaea that oxidize methane and short-chain alkanes [15, 17,18,19,20,21] and hydrocarbon-oxidizing, free-living or syntrophic sulfate-reducing bacteria (reviewed by [22]).

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