Abstract

BackgroundGeothermal areas are of great interest for the study of microbial communities. The results of such investigations can be used in a variety of fields (ecology, microbiology, medicine) to answer fundamental questions, as well as those with practical benefits. Uzon caldera is located in the Uzon-Geyser depression that is situated in the centre of the Karym-Semyachin region of the East Kamchatka graben-synclinorium. The microbial communities of Zavarzin spring are well studied; however, its benthic microbial mat has not been previously described.ResultsPyrosequencing of the V3 region of the 16S rRNA gene was used to study the benthic microbial community of the Zavarzin thermal spring (Uzon Caldera, Kamchatka). The community is dominated by bacteria (>95% of all sequences), including thermophilic, chemoorganotrophic Caldiserica (33.0%) and Dictyoglomi (24.8%). The benthic community and the previously examined planktonic community of Zavarzin spring have qualitatively similar, but quantitatively different, compositions.ConclusionsIn this study, we performed a metagenomic analysis of the benthic microbial mat of Zavarzin spring. We compared this benthic community to microbial communities found in the water and of an integral probe consisting of water and bottom sediments. Various phylogenetic groups of microorganisms, including potentially new ones, represent the full-fledged trophic system of Zavarzin. A thorough geochemical study of the spring was performed.

Highlights

  • Geothermal areas are of great interest for the study of microbial communities

  • Microbial communities in geothermal areas are of great interest in a variety of fields, including ecology, microbiology and medicine

  • Microbial communities in Kamchatka (Russia) thermal springs have been studied since the 1960s using traditional microbiology methods based on morphology, physiology and biochemistry of the indigenous microorganisms [9]

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Summary

Introduction

Geothermal areas are of great interest for the study of microbial communities The results of such investigations can be used in a variety of fields (ecology, microbiology, medicine) to answer fundamental questions, as well as those with practical benefits. Microbial communities in geothermal areas are of great interest in a variety of fields, including ecology, microbiology and medicine. They have the potential to answer fundamental questions, as well as those with practical benefits [1,2,3,4]. Zavarzin is prominent among the Uzon thermal springs It is a large, deep pool with fine blue sediment and thick layers of sulphur deposits, and microbial communities have developed along its creek [16,17]

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