Abstract

We investigated the potential contribution of ice-marginal environments to the microbial communities of cryoconite holes, small depressions filled with meltwater that form on the surface of Forni Glacier (Italian Alps). Cryoconite holes are considered the most biologically active environments on glaciers. Bacteria can colonize these environments by short-range transport from ice-marginal environments or by long-range transport from distant areas. We used high throughput DNA sequencing to identify Operational Taxonomic Units (OTUs) present in cryoconite holes and three ice-marginal environments, the moraines, the glacier forefield, and a large (> 3 m high) ice-cored dirt cone occurring on the glacier surface. Bacterial communities of cryoconite holes were different from those of ice-marginal environments and hosted fewer OTUs. However, a network analysis revealed that the cryoconite holes shared more OTUs with the moraines and the dirt cone than with the glacier forefield. Ice-marginal environments may therefore act as sources of bacteria for cryoconite holes, but differences in environmental conditions limit the number of bacterial strains that may survive in them. At the same time, cryoconite holes host a few OTUs that were not found in any ice-marginal environment we sampled, thus suggesting that some bacterial populations are positively selected by the specific environmental conditions of the cryoconite holes.

Highlights

  • Glaciers and ice sheets represent the largest part of the cryosphere on the continents [1,2] and store most of the Earth’s freshwater

  • Burkholderiales and other unclassified Betaproteobacteria were the dominant taxa in ice marginal environments

  • Cyanobacteria were virtually absent in ice-marginal environments whereas they represented up to 25% of the sequences in cryoconite

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Summary

Introduction

Glaciers and ice sheets represent the largest part of the cryosphere on the continents [1,2] and store most of the Earth’s freshwater. Cryoconite holes range in diameter from a few centimetres to more than a meter, can cover up to 10% of the ablation zone of glaciers and can be considered autonomous micro-ecosystems [2,4], inhabited by many Archaea, bacteria, cyanobacteria, protists and micro-invertebrates [4,5]. They are considered the most biologically active environments on the glaciers due to the high metabolic.

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