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Authors Blöthe, M. ; Wegorzewski, A. ; Müller, C. ; Simon, F. ; Kuhn, T. ; Schippers, A.
Title Manganese-cycling microbial communities inside deep-sea manganese nodules
Date 15.07.2015
Number 44002
Abstract Polymetallic nodules (manganese nodules) have been formed on deep sea sediments over millions of years and are currently explored for their economic potential, particularly for cobalt, nickel, copper, and manganese. Here we explored microbial communities inside nodules from the northeastern equatorial Pacific. The nodules have a large connected pore space with a huge inner surface of 120 m2/g as analyzed by computer tomography and BET measurements. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and electron microprobe analysis revealed a complex chemical fine structure. This consisted of layers with highly variable Mn/Fe ratios (<1 to >500) and mainly of turbostratic phyllomanganates such as 7 and 10 Å vernadites alternating with layers of Fe-bearing vernadite (d-MnO2) epitaxially intergrown with amorphous feroxyhyte (d-FeOOH). Using molecular 16S rRNA gene techniques (clone libraries, pyrosequencing, and real-time PCR), we show that polymetallic nodules provide a suitable habitat for prokaryotes with an abundant and diverse prokaryotic community dominated by nodule-specific Mn(IV)-reducing and Mn(II)-oxidizing bacteria. These bacteria were not detected in the nodule-surrounding sediment. The high abundance and dominance of Mn-cycling bacteria in the manganese nodules argue for a biologically driven closed manganese cycle inside the nodules relevant for their formation and potential degradation.
Publisher Environmental Science & Technology
Wikidata
Citation Environmental Science & Technology 49 (2015) 7692-7700
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/es504930v
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