Publications by authors named "Angelique E Ray"

Article Synopsis
  • Old Wallow is a coastal desert in Antarctica that is largely unexplored, and researchers studied how nutrients from a nearby elephant seal wallow impact the soil communities in this hyper-arid area.
  • The study found that while overall soil microbial communities were similar to other environments, there was a significant presence of unclassified taxa often associated with marine ecosystems.
  • Elevated nutrient levels and specific environmental factors, such as salinity and moisture, were identified as key drivers influencing community composition, indicating that the ecosystem could be sensitive to future environmental changes.
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Overgeneralization and a lack of baseline data for microorganisms in high-latitude environments have restricted the understanding of the microbial response to climate change, which is needed to establish Antarctic conservation frameworks. To bridge this gap, we examined over 17,000 sequence variants of bacteria and microeukarya across the hyperarid Vestfold Hills and Windmill Islands regions of eastern Antarctica. Using an extended gradient forest model, we quantified multispecies response to variations along 79 edaphic gradients to explore the effects of change and wind-driven dispersal on community dynamics under projected warming trends.

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Article Synopsis
  • The McMurdo Dry Valleys in Antarctica are a unique, ice-free environment with nutrient-poor soils, where microorganisms thrive mainly within rocks (endolithic habitat) to protect against extreme conditions.
  • These microorganisms include various species of lichen, algae, fungi, and a diverse array of bacteria, with four novel bacterial classes identified: Spiritibacteria, Martimicrobia, Tarhunnaeia, and Uliximicrobia.
  • The metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from these classes reveal that these bacteria are aerobic heterotrophs capable of breaking down organic materials from other organisms and possess mechanisms for metal detoxification and gas oxidation, which are crucial for their survival in such harsh conditions.
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Article Synopsis
  • Scientists studied tiny organisms called endolithic microbes that live in the extremely cold and dry environment of Antarctica.
  • They discovered that out of 109 different types of these microbes, many were new and unknown to science.
  • These microbes might survive by using special gases and chemical reactions from the atmosphere to get energy, helping them live in such a tough environment.
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Atmospheric chemosynthesis is a recently proposed form of chemoautotrophic microbial primary production. The proposed process relies on the oxidation of trace concentrations of hydrogen (≤530 ppbv), carbon monoxide (≤90 ppbv), and methane (≤1,870 ppbv) gases using high-affinity enzymes. Atmospheric hydrogen and carbon monoxide oxidation have been primarily linked to microbial growth in desert surface soils scarce in liquid water and organic nutrients, and low in photosynthetic communities.

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Cold desert soil microbiomes thrive despite severe moisture and nutrient limitations. In Eastern Antarctic soils, bacterial primary production is supported by trace gas oxidation and the light-independent RuBisCO form IE. This study aims to determine if atmospheric chemosynthesis is widespread within Antarctic, Arctic and Tibetan cold deserts, to identify the breadth of trace gas chemosynthetic taxa and to further characterize the genetic determinants of this process.

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Candidatus Dormibacterota is an uncultured bacterial phylum found predominantly in soil that is present in high abundances within cold desert soils. Here, we interrogate nine metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs), including six new MAGs derived from soil metagenomes obtained from two eastern Antarctic sites. Phylogenomic and taxonomic analyses revealed these MAGs represent four genera and five species, representing two order-level clades within Ca.

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Soil microbiomes within oligotrophic cold deserts are extraordinarily diverse. Increasingly, oligotrophic sites with low levels of phototrophic primary producers are reported, leading researchers to question their carbon and energy sources. A novel microbial carbon fixation process termed atmospheric chemosynthesis recently filled this gap as it was shown to be supporting primary production at two Eastern Antarctic deserts.

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