Abstract

Oceanic ridge flank systems represent one of the largest and least-explored microbial habitats on Earth. Fundamental ecological questions regarding community activity, recruitment, and succession in this environment remain unanswered. Here, we investigated ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) in the sediment-buried basalts on the oxic and young ridge flank at North Pond, a sediment-filled pond on the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, and compared them with those in the overlying sediments and bottom seawater. Nitrification in the North Pond basement is thermodynamically favorable and is supported by a reaction-transport model simulating the dynamics of nitrate in the crustal fluids. Nitrification rate is estimated to account for 6% to 7% of oxygen consumption, which is similar to the ratios found in marine oxic sediments, suggesting that aerobic mineralization of organic matter is the major ammonium source for crustal nitrifiers. Using the archaeal 16S rRNA and amoA genes as phylogenetic markers, we show that AOA, composed solely of Nitrosopumilaceae, are the major archaeal dwellers at North Pond. Phylogenetic analysis reveals that the crustal AOA communities are distinct from those in the bottom seawater and the upper oxic sediments but are similar to those in the basal part of the overlying sediment column, suggesting either similar environmental selection or the dispersal of microbes across the sediment-basement interface. Additionally, quantitative abundance data suggest enrichment of the dominant Nitrosopumilaceae clade (Eta clade) in the basement compared to the seawater. This study explored AOA and their activity in the upper oceanic crust, and our results have ecological implications for the biogeochemical cycling of nitrogen in the crustal subsurface.IMPORTANCE Ridge flanks represent the major avenue of chemical and heat exchange between the Earth's oceans and the lithosphere and are thought to harbor an enormous and understudied biosphere. However, little is known about the diversity and functionality of the crustal biosphere. Here, we report an indigenous community of archaea specialized in ammonia oxidation (i.e., AOA) in the oxic oceanic crust at North Pond. These AOA are the dominant archaea and are likely responsible for most of the cycling taking place in the first step of nitrification, a feasible nitrogen cycling step in the oxic basement. The crustal AOA community structure significantly differs from that in deep ocean water but is similar to that of the community in the overlying sediments in close proximity. This report links the occurrence of AOA to their metabolic activity in the oxic subseafloor crust and suggests that ecological selection and in situ proliferation may shape the microbial community structure in the rocky subsurface.

Highlights

  • Oceanic ridge flank systems represent one of the largest and leastexplored microbial habitats on Earth

  • ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA) in Subseafloor Oceanic Crust composition of circulating fluids in the crustal basement is in equilibrium with the sediment porewater at the sediment-basement interface, nitrate concentration in the formation fluids should be identical to that in the basal sediment porewater, i.e., 28.2 ␮M and 23.5 ␮M at sites 83 and 84, respectively [32]

  • Phylogenetic analysis based on data representing 16S rRNA and archaeal amoA genes demonstrated that AOA communities in the basaltic crust are dominated by an uncharacterized Nitrosopumilaceae Eta clade

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Summary

Introduction

Oceanic ridge flank systems represent one of the largest and leastexplored microbial habitats on Earth. Scientific explorations at North Pond, a sediment-filled pond on the western flank of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, have resulted in the successful retrieval of pristine sedimentburied oceanic crust and of the overlying sediment [20], as well as of bottom seawater (BS) [10, 21, 22]. These samples provide an unprecedented opportunity to systematically evaluate the dispersal patterns and potential functions of microbes across benthic regimes. The geological settings on this ridge flank, i.e., low-temperature and oxic hydrothermal circulation conditions [21, 23], make North Pond a site that is representative of subsurface habitats beneath a wide range of ridge flanks globally [1, 20]

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