| Literature DB >> 15618510 |
Steven D'Hondt1, Bo Barker Jørgensen, D Jay Miller, Anja Batzke, Ruth Blake, Barry A Cragg, Heribert Cypionka, Gerald R Dickens, Timothy Ferdelman, Kai-Uwe Hinrichs, Nils G Holm, Richard Mitterer, Arthur Spivack, Guizhi Wang, Barbara Bekins, Bert Engelen, Kathryn Ford, Glen Gettemy, Scott D Rutherford, Henrik Sass, C Gregory Skilbeck, Ivano W Aiello, Gilles Guèrin, Christopher H House, Fumio Inagaki, Patrick Meister, Thomas Naehr, Sachiko Niitsuma, R John Parkes, Axel Schippers, David C Smith, Andreas Teske, Juergen Wiegel, Christian Naranjo Padilla, Juana Luz Solis Acosta.
Abstract
Diverse microbial communities and numerous energy-yielding activities occur in deeply buried sediments of the eastern Pacific Ocean. Distributions of metabolic activities often deviate from the standard model. Rates of activities, cell concentrations, and populations of cultured bacteria vary consistently from one subseafloor environment to another. Net rates of major activities principally rely on electron acceptors and electron donors from the photosynthetic surface world. At open-ocean sites, nitrate and oxygen are supplied to the deepest sedimentary communities through the underlying basaltic aquifer. In turn, these sedimentary communities may supply dissolved electron donors and nutrients to the underlying crustal biosphere.Entities:
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Year: 2004 PMID: 15618510 DOI: 10.1126/science.1101155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728