Abstract
The Axial Response Team (ART-1) documented greatly intensified chronic-style hydrothermal plumes at Axial Volcano following a 1998 eruptive event. Significantly higher numbers of bacteria were found in the plume versus background stations and depths, due largely to 5 samples with high numbers (to 1.8 x 105/ml) in far field stations. Highest ratios (0.20) of metal depositing capsuled bacteria to total bacteria were found in the near-field (over caldera) plume. An unusual capsule form (FeCap), that dominated the near field plume capsule populations, was present in all plume samples, but were absent in background samples. Multi-cell filaments, metal-encrusted sheathed clusters and matrix-enmeshed colonies, all uncommon in the water column, were also present in plume samples.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Cowen, J. P., Shackelford, R., McGee, D., Phyllis, L., Baker, E. T., & Olson, E. (1999). Microbial biomass in the hydrothermal plumes associated with the 1998 Axial Volcano eruption. Geophysical Research Letters, 26(24), 3637–3640. https://doi.org/10.1029/1999GL002343
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