Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths

>Magister Scientiae - MSc === The extreme conditions of Antarctic desert soils render this environment selective towards a diverse range of psychrotrophic microbial communities. Cracks and fissures in translucent quartz rocks permit an adequate amount of penetrating light, sufficient water and nu...

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Main Author: Keriuscia Gokul, Jarishma
Other Authors: Cowan, D. A.
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2015
Subjects:
ITS
18S
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4031
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-40312018-08-22T04:14:45Z Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths Keriuscia Gokul, Jarishma Cowan, D. A. Tuffin, Marla Stomeo, F. Hypolith Antarctic Dry Valleys Microbial diversity DGGE T-RFLP Culture independent ITS 18S Microalgae >Magister Scientiae - MSc The extreme conditions of Antarctic desert soils render this environment selective towards a diverse range of psychrotrophic microbial communities. Cracks and fissures in translucent quartz rocks permit an adequate amount of penetrating light, sufficient water and nutrients to support cryptic microbial development. Hypolithons colonizing the ventral surface of these quartz rocks have been classified into three types: cyanobacterial dominated (Type I),moss dominated (Type II) and lichenized (Type III) communities. Eukaryotic microbial communities were reported to represent only a minor fraction of Antarctic communities. In this study, culture independent techniques (DGGE, T-RFLP and clone library construction) were employed to determine the profile of the dominant eukaryotes, fungi and microalgae present in the three different hypolithic communities. The 18S rRNA gene (Euk for eukaryotes), internal transcribed spacer (ITS for fungi) and microalgal specific regions of the 18S rRNA gene, were the phylogenetic markers targeted for PCR amplification from hypolith metagenomic DNA. Results suggest that the three hypolith types are characterized by different eukaryotic, fungal and microalgal communities, as implied by nMDS analysis of the DGGE and T-RFLP profiles. Sequence analysis indicates close affiliation to members of Amoebozoa, Alveolata, Rhizaria (general eukaryote), Ascomycota (fungal) and Streptophyta (microalgal). Many of these clones may represent novel species. This study demonstrates that Dry Valley hypolithons harbour higher eukaryote diversity than previously recognised.Each hypolithon is colonized by specialized microbial communities with possible keystone species. The ecological role of the detected microorganisms in the hypolith environment is also theorized, and a trophic hierarchy postulated. 2015-03-24T08:16:36Z 2015-03-24T08:16:36Z 2012 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4031 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Hypolith
Antarctic
Dry Valleys
Microbial diversity
DGGE
T-RFLP
Culture independent
ITS
18S
Microalgae
spellingShingle Hypolith
Antarctic
Dry Valleys
Microbial diversity
DGGE
T-RFLP
Culture independent
ITS
18S
Microalgae
Keriuscia Gokul, Jarishma
Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
description >Magister Scientiae - MSc === The extreme conditions of Antarctic desert soils render this environment selective towards a diverse range of psychrotrophic microbial communities. Cracks and fissures in translucent quartz rocks permit an adequate amount of penetrating light, sufficient water and nutrients to support cryptic microbial development. Hypolithons colonizing the ventral surface of these quartz rocks have been classified into three types: cyanobacterial dominated (Type I),moss dominated (Type II) and lichenized (Type III) communities. Eukaryotic microbial communities were reported to represent only a minor fraction of Antarctic communities. In this study, culture independent techniques (DGGE, T-RFLP and clone library construction) were employed to determine the profile of the dominant eukaryotes, fungi and microalgae present in the three different hypolithic communities. The 18S rRNA gene (Euk for eukaryotes), internal transcribed spacer (ITS for fungi) and microalgal specific regions of the 18S rRNA gene, were the phylogenetic markers targeted for PCR amplification from hypolith metagenomic DNA. Results suggest that the three hypolith types are characterized by different eukaryotic, fungal and microalgal communities, as implied by nMDS analysis of the DGGE and T-RFLP profiles. Sequence analysis indicates close affiliation to members of Amoebozoa, Alveolata, Rhizaria (general eukaryote), Ascomycota (fungal) and Streptophyta (microalgal). Many of these clones may represent novel species. This study demonstrates that Dry Valley hypolithons harbour higher eukaryote diversity than previously recognised.Each hypolithon is colonized by specialized microbial communities with possible keystone species. The ecological role of the detected microorganisms in the hypolith environment is also theorized, and a trophic hierarchy postulated.
author2 Cowan, D. A.
author_facet Cowan, D. A.
Keriuscia Gokul, Jarishma
author Keriuscia Gokul, Jarishma
author_sort Keriuscia Gokul, Jarishma
title Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
title_short Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
title_full Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
title_fullStr Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
title_full_unstemmed Eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
title_sort eukaryotic diversity of miers valley hypoliths
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4031
work_keys_str_mv AT keriusciagokuljarishma eukaryoticdiversityofmiersvalleyhypoliths
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