Hypolithic Microbial Community of Quartz Pavement in the High-Altitude Tundra of Central Tibet

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Abstract

The hypolithic microbial community associated with quartz pavement at a high-altitude tundra location in central Tibet is described. A small-scale ecological survey indicated that 36% of quartz rocks were colonized. Community profiling using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism revealed no significant difference in community structure among a number of colonized rocks. Real-time quantitative PCR and phylogenetic analysis of environmental phylotypes obtained from clone libraries were used to elucidate community structure across all domains. The hypolithon was dominated by cyanobacterial phylotypes (73%) with relatively low frequencies of other bacterial phylotypes, largely represented by the chloroflexi, actinobacteria, and bacteriodetes. Unidentified crenarchaeal phylotypes accounted for 4% of recoverable phylotypes, while algae, fungi, and mosses were indicated by a small fraction of recoverable phylotypes. © 2010 The Author(s).

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Wong, F. K. Y., Lacap, D. C., Lau, M. C. Y., Aitchison, J. C., Cowan, D. A., & Pointing, S. B. (2010). Hypolithic Microbial Community of Quartz Pavement in the High-Altitude Tundra of Central Tibet. Microbial Ecology, 60(4), 730–739. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00248-010-9653-2

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