Abstract

Anchialine sinkholes provide insight into coastal aquifer systems and coastal mixing processes. Aquifer microbial community function is usually inferred from hydrochemical information, but there are few direct studies of microbial communities in the Floridan Aquifer. Hospital Hole is a 43 m-deep stratified sinkhole under the Weeki Wachee River, FL, with three distinct brackish layers: a hypoxic layer, a chemocline and a sulfidic anoxic layer. Illumina sequencing and bioinformatic tools were used to reconstruct metabolic functions and interactions of microbial communities in each layer. Each layer appears to originate from different parts of the coastal mixing zone and has a distinct microbial community with unique functions, which are influenced by the respective hydrochemistry. Sulfide oxidation and nitrate reduction are the most abundant functions. Syntrophy between methane oxidizers, methanogens and sulfate reducers is present. Similarities between the hydrochemistry and potential connectivity of Hospital Hole and the Floridan Aquifer coastal mixing zone suggest that microbial communities of Hospital Hole could be a surrogate for the coastal mixing zone of the aquifer in the absence of direct studies. Understanding how groundwater microbial communities react to saltwater intrusion and nutrient flux will be useful in predicting how coastal aquifer regions might react to anthropogenic change.

Highlights

  • Karst landscapes make up 20 percent of the world’s landmass

  • This study focuses on Hospital Hole, a coastal stratified anchialine sinkhole located underneath the Weeki Wachee River in Florida

  • The coastal karst system represented by Hospital Hole provides a unique window into the hydrochemical and biological processes that occur in the coastal regions of karst aquifers, including the Upper Floridan Aquifer

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Summary

Introduction

Karst landscapes make up 20 percent of the world’s landmass. Human populations within. Most studies of the Upper Floridan Aquifer have inferred the presence of microbial communities from hydrochemical analyses. Appear connected to the coastal mixing zone of the Upper Floridan Aquifer, and there could be similarities between the microbial community in Jewfish Sink and Hospital Hole. Studies of Hospital Hole and other coastal sinkholes can identify and characterize microbial processes that occur within the coastal mixing zone. The primary focus of this paper is to characterize the microbial communities and their function within this sinkhole to determine if these communities could be similar to those within the coastal mixing zone of the Upper. Image recreated the depth of Hospital Hole in relation to the freshwater/saltwater coastal mixing zone. Image from [6].from [6]

Hydrochemical
Method
Biological
Statistical Analysis
Results
The Hypoxic Layer
The Anoxic Layer
The Chemocline
Hospital Hole
Conclusions

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