Halophiles, salt-loving organisms that flourish in saline environments, are classified as slight, moderate or extreme, depending on their requirement for sodium chloride. While most marine organisms are slight halophiles, moderate and extreme halophiles are generally more specialised microbes inhabiting hypersaline environments found all over the world in arid, coastal and deep-sea locations, underground salt mines and artificial salterns. Halophilic microorganisms include heterotrophic, phototrophic and methanogenic archaea, photosynthetic, lithotrophic and heterotrophic bacteria and photosynthetic and heterotrophic eukaryotes. Examples of extremely halophilic microorganisms include Halobacterium sp. NRC-1, an archaeon; Aphanothece halophytica, a cyanobacterium; and Dunaliella salina, a green alga. Common multicellular halophilic eukaryotes include brine shrimp and brine fly larvae that serve as an important food source for birds. In order to balance the osmotic stress of hypersaline environments, halophilic microorganisms either accumulate organic compatible solutes internally, produce acidic proteins to increase solvation and improve function in high salinity, or use a combination of strategies.
CITATION STYLE
Grant, W. D. (1986). Halophiles. Kagaku To Seibutsu, 24(3), 191–197. https://doi.org/10.1271/kagakutoseibutsu1962.24.191
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