Abstract

Lava caves differ from karstic caves in their genesis and mineral composition. Subsurface microbiology of lava tube caves in Canary Islands, a volcanic archipelago in the Atlantic Ocean, is largely unknown. We have focused the investigation in a representative lava tube cave, Fuente de la Canaria Cave, in La Palma Island, Spain, which presents different types of speleothems and colored microbial mats. Four samples collected in this cave were studied using DNA next-generation sequencing and field emission scanning electron microscopy for bacterial identification, functional profiling, and morphological characterization. The data showed an almost exclusive dominance of Bacteria over Archaea. The distribution in phyla revealed a majority abundance of Proteobacteria (37–89%), followed by Actinobacteria, Acidobacteria and Candidatus Rokubacteria. These four phyla comprised a total relative abundance of 72–96%. The main ecological functions in the microbial communities were chemoheterotrophy, methanotrophy, sulfur and nitrogen metabolisms, and CO2 fixation; although other ecological functions were outlined. Genome annotations of the especially representative taxon Ga0077536 (about 71% of abundance in moonmilk) predicted the presence of genes involved in CO2 fixation, formaldehyde consumption, sulfur and nitrogen metabolisms, and microbially-induced carbonate precipitation. The detection of several putative lineages associated with C, N, S, Fe and Mn indicates that Fuente de la Canaria Cave basalts are colonized by metabolically diverse prokaryotic communities involved in the biogeochemical cycling of major elements.

Highlights

  • Lava tube caves are formed as a result of surface solidification of a lava flow during the last stages of volcanic activity

  • The data reported on microbial diversity of lava tube caves in other volcanic islands need to be contrasted with those obtained for the relatively unknown lava tube caves from the Canary Islands, and so we focused the investigation in Fuente de la Canaria Cave, a representative lava tube cave with different types of speleothems and microbial mats

  • Cells with long surface appendages were found in this sample (Fig. 3E), resembling the prosthecate bacterium found in grey vermiculation deposits, reported by D’Angeli et al (2019) in Fetida Cave, an active sulfuric acid cave in Apulia, Italy

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Summary

Introduction

Lava tube caves are formed as a result of surface solidification of a lava flow during the last stages of volcanic activity. In this decade lava tube caves become a hot spot for microbiologists, among other reasons by the interest in the search of recognizable biosignatures useful as astrobiology models due to the analogy of Earth volcanic lava caves with those of Mars (Perkins, 2020)

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