A new extreme environment for aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs: biological soil crusts.

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Abstract

Biological soil crusts improve the health of arid or semiarid soils by enhancing water content, nutrient relations and mechanical stability, facilitated largely by phototrophic microorganisms. Until recently, only oxygenic phototrophs were known from soil crusts. A recent study has demonstrated the presence of aerobic representatives of Earth's second major photosynthetic clade, the evolutionarily basal anoxygenic phototrophs. Three Canadian soil crust communities yielded pink and orange aerobic anoxygenic phototrophic strains possessing the light-harvesting pigment bacteriochlorophyll a. At relative abundances of 0.1-5.9% of the cultivable bacterial community, they were comparable in density to aerobic phototrophs in other documented habitats. 16S rDNA sequence analysis revealed the isolates to be related to Methylobacterium, Belnapia, Muricoccus and Sphingomonas. This result adds a new type of harsh habitat, dry soil environments, to the environments known to support aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs.

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Csotonyi, J. T., Swiderski, J., Stackebrandt, E., & Yurkov, V. (2010). A new extreme environment for aerobic anoxygenic phototrophs: biological soil crusts. Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology, 675, 3–14. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-1528-3_1

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