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Old Wallow is an underexplored, hyper-arid coastal desert in Antarctica's Vestfold Hills. Situated near an elephant seal wallow, we examined how stochastic nutrient inputs from the seal wallow affect soil communities amid environmental changes along a spatially explicit sampling transect. We hypothesized that nutrient levels would be elevated due to proximity to the seal wallow, influencing community distributions. While the soil bacterial and eukaryotic communities at the phylum level were similar to other terrestrial environments, analysis at class and family levels revealed a dominance of unclassified taxa that are often linked to marine environments. Elevated nutrient concentrations (NO , SO , SO) were found at Old Wallow, with conductivity and Cl levels up to 10-fold higher at the lowest elevation soils, correlating with significantly ( < 0.05) higher abundances of halophilic () and uncultivated lineages ( Actinomarinales, unclassified and unclassified ). An improved Gradient Forest model was used to quantify microbial responses to 26 soil gradients at OW, revealing variable responses to environmental predictors and identifying critical environmental thresholds or drivers of community turnover. Major tipping points were projected for eukaryotes with SO , pH, and SO, and for bacteria with moisture, NaO, and Cl. Thus, the Old Wallow ecosystem is primarily shaped by salt, sulphate, and moisture and is dominated by uncultivated taxa, which may be sensitive to environmental changes once critical tipping points are reached. This study provides critical baseline data for future regional monitoring under threats of environmental change.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2024.1443491 | DOI Listing |
Front Microbiol
September 2024
School of Biotechnology and Biomolecular Sciences, The University of NSW, Kensington, NSW, Australia.
J Therm Biol
February 2022
Scottish Centre for Ecology and the Natural Environment, Institute of Biodiversity, Animal Health and Comparative Medicine, University of Glasgow, Rowardennan, Glasgow, G63 0AW, Scotland, UK.
The moult in southern elephant seals (Mirounga leonina) represents an especially energetically demanding period during which seals must maintain high skin temperature to facilitate complete replacement of body fur and upper dermis. In this study, heat flux from the body surface was measured on 18 moulting southern elephant seals to estimate metabolic heat loss in three different habitats (beach, wallow and vegetation). Temperature data loggers were also deployed on 10 southern elephant seals to monitor skin surface temperature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhysiol Behav
February 2019
Ecole Nationale Vétérinaire d'Alfort, Ethologie, 7 avenue du Général de Gaulle, 94700 Maisons-Alfort, France; Laboratoire MECADEV, UMR 7179 CNRS/MNHN, 1 avenue du petit château, 91800 Brunoy, France.
While endotherms can rely on their insulation to reduce heat loss to adapt to cold environments, renewing of fur during molt impairs insulation while they have to perfuse the periphery to support epidermal tissues. The southern elephant seal Mirounga leonina undertakes an annual catastrophic molt while fasting on land in a wet, windy and cold environment. However, southern elephant seals show characteristic aggregation patterns that are predicted to reduce high metabolic costs during the molt.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
February 2017
Division of Genetics and Molecular Biology, Institute of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science University of Malaya, 50603 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Planococcus is a Gram-positive halotolerant bacterial genus in the phylum Firmicutes, commonly found in various habitats in Antarctica. Quorum quenching (QQ) is the disruption of bacterial cell-to-cell communication (known as quorum sensing), which has previously been described in mesophilic bacteria. This study demonstrated the QQ activity of a psychrotolerant strain, Planococcus versutus strain L10.
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