Publication | Open Access
Diverse hypolithic refuge communities in the McMurdo Dry Valleys
82
Citations
33
References
2010
Year
Microbial DiversityPaleoenvironmental ReconstructionHabitat LossMcmurdo Dry ValleysMicrobial EcologyAntarctic DesertsType IiiSoil MicrobiologyAnthropologyPaleoecologyType IiEarth Science
Abstract Hyper-arid deserts present extreme challenges to life. The environmental buffering provided by quartz and other translucent rocks allows hypolithic microbial communities to develop on sub-soil surfaces of such rocks. These refuge communities have been reported, for many locations worldwide, to be predominantly cyanobacterial in nature. Here we report the discovery in Antarctica’s hyper-arid McMurdo Dry Valleys of three clearly distinguishable types of hypolithic community. Based on gross colonization morphology and identification of dominant taxa, we have classified hypolithic communities as Type I (cyanobacterial dominated), Type II (fungal dominated) and Type III (moss dominated). This discovery supports a growing awareness of the high biocomplexity in Antarctic deserts, emphasizes the possible importance of cryptic microbial communities in nutrient cycling and provides evidence for possible successional community processes within a cold arid landscape.
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