Contributors | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Joye, Samantha B. | University of Georgia (UGA) | Principal Investigator |
Teske, Andreas | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC-Chapel Hill) | Co-Principal Investigator |
York, Amber D. | Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI BCO-DMO) | BCO-DMO Data Manager |
BCO-DMO Data Manager Processing Notes:
* Data submitted in Excel file "Data submission OCE.xlsx" sheet "Inhibition experiment" extracted to csv
* added a conventional header with dataset name, PI name, version date
* modified parameter names to conform with BCO-DMO naming conventions (spaces, +, and - changed to underscores). Units in parentheses removed and added to Parameter Description metadata section.
* removed metadata notes at the bottom of the file and moved to parameter descriptions. E.g. "B.D.: Below detection limit."
* Date formats converted to ISO 8601 yyyy-mm-dd
* Lat/lon converted to decimal degrees from degrees decimal minutes
File |
---|
inhibition.csv (Comma Separated Values (.csv), 406 bytes) MD5:fc504ee35f4c24be0551c0db33489071 Primary data file for dataset ID 814415 |
Parameter | Description | Units |
Dive_No | Dive number | unitless |
Site | Site name | unitless |
Sampling_date | Sample date (UTC) in ISO 8601 format yyyy-mm-dd | unitless |
Latitude | Latitude | decimal degrees |
Longitude | Longitude | decimal degrees |
Treatment | Treatment description. BES = "2-bromoethanesulfonate" | unitless |
Acetate_methanogenesis_rate | Rate of Methanogenesis from Acetate. | picomoles per cubic centimeter per day (pmol cm-3 d-1) |
Aceate_Oxidation_rate | Aceate Oxidation rate | picomoles per cubic centimeter per day (pmol cm-3 d-1) |
Methanol_methanogenesis_rate | Rate of Methanogenesis from Methanol. | picomoles per cubic centimeter per day (pmol cm-3 d-1) |
Methanol_Oxidation_rate | Methanol oxidation rate | picomoles per cubic centimeter per day (pmol cm-3 d-1) |
Website | |
Platform | R/V Atlantis |
Report | |
Start Date | 2016-12-09 |
End Date | 2016-12-27 |
Website | |
Platform | Alvin |
Report | |
Start Date | 2016-12-09 |
End Date | 2016-12-27 |
Description | Alvin dives conducted at Guyamas Basin on R/V Atlantis cruise AT37-06. |
Description from NSF award abstract:
Hydrothermally active sediments in the Guaymas Basin are dominated by novel microbial communities that catalyze important biogeochemical processes in these seafloor ecosystems. This project will investigate genomic potential, physiological capabilities and biogeochemical roles of key uncultured organisms from Guaymas sediments, especially the high-temperature anaerobic methane oxidizers that occur specifically in hydrothermally active sediments (ANME-1Guaymas). The study will focus on their role in carbon transformations, but also explore their potential involvement in sulfur and nitrogen transformations. First-order research topics include quantifying anaerobic methane oxidation under high temperature,in situ concentrations of phosphorus and methane , and with alternate electron acceptors; sulfate and sulfur-dependent microbial pathways and isotopic signatures under these conditions; and nitrogen transformations in methane-oxidizing microbial communities, hydrothermal mats and sediments.
This integrated biogeochemical and microbiological research will explore the pathways of and environmental controls on the consumption and production of methane, other alkanes, inorganic carbon, organic acids and organic matter that fuel the Guaymas sedimentary microbial ecosystem. The hydrothermal sediments of Guaymas Basin provide a spatially compact, high-activity location for investigating novel modes of methane cycling and carbon assimilation into microbial biomass. In the case of anaerobic methane oxidation, the high temperature and pressure tolerance of Guaymas Basin methane-oxidizing microbial communities, and their potential to uncouple from the dominant electron acceptor sulfate, vastly increase the predicted subsurface habitat space and biogeochemical role for anaerobic microbial methanotrophy in global deep subsurface diagenesis. Further, microbial methane production and oxidation interlocks with syulfur and nitrogen transformations, which will be explored at the organism and process level in hydrothermal sediment microbial communities and mats of Guaymas Basin. In general, first-order research tasks (rate measurements, radiotracer incorporation studies, genomes, in situ microgradients) define the key microbial capabilities, pathways and processes that mediate chemical exchange between the subsurface hydrothermal/seeps and deep ocean waters.
Funding Source | Award |
---|---|
NSF Division of Ocean Sciences (NSF OCE) |