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Exploring deep microbial life in coal-bearing sediment down to ~2.5 km below the ocean floor
Author(s) -
Fumio Inagaki,
KaiUwe Hinrichs,
Yusuke Kubo,
Marshall W. Bowles,
Verena B. Heuer,
WeiLi Hong,
Takao Hoshino,
Akira Ijiri,
Hiroyuki Imachi,
Mikako Ito,
Masanori Kaneko,
Mark A. Lever,
YuShih Lin,
Barbara A. Methé,
Sumito Morita,
Yuki Morono,
Wataru Tanikawa,
Monika Bihan,
Stephen A. Bowden,
Marcus Elvert,
Clemens Glombitza,
Doris Groß,
Guy J. Harrington,
Tomoyuki Hori,
K. Li,
David R. Limmer,
C.-H. Liu,
Masafumi Murayama,
Naohiko Ohkouchi,
Shuhei Ono,
Y.-S. Park,
Stephen C. Phillips,
Xavier Prieto-Mollar,
M. Purkey,
Natascha Riedinger,
Yoshinori Sanada,
Justine Sauvage,
Glen Snyder,
Rita Susilawati,
Yoshinori Takano,
Eiji Tasumi,
Takeshi Terada,
Hitoshi Tomaru,
Elizabeth TrembathReichert,
David T. Wang,
Yasuhiro Yamada
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 12.556
H-Index - 1186
eISSN - 1095-9203
pISSN - 0036-8075
DOI - 10.1126/science.aaa6882
Subject(s) - deep sea , seabed , coal , seafloor spreading , sediment , geology , forest floor , oceanography , sedimentary rock , soil water , environmental science , deep water , earth science , ecology , geochemistry , soil science , geomorphology , geography , archaeology , biology
Microbial life inhabits deeply buried marine sediments, but the extent of this vast ecosystem remains poorly constrained. Here we provide evidence for the existence of microbial communities in ~40° to 60°C sediment associated with lignite coal beds at ~1.5 to 2.5 km below the seafloor in the Pacific Ocean off Japan. Microbial methanogenesis was indicated by the isotopic compositions of methane and carbon dioxide, biomarkers, cultivation data, and gas compositions. Concentrations of indigenous microbial cells below 1.5 km ranged from <10 to ~10(4) cells cm(-3). Peak concentrations occurred in lignite layers, where communities differed markedly from shallower subseafloor communities and instead resembled organotrophic communities in forest soils. This suggests that terrigenous sediments retain indigenous community members tens of millions of years after burial in the seabed.

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