Publications by authors named "Charlotte Kleint"

Oceanic spreading centers north of Iceland are characterized by ultraslow spreading rates, and related hydrothermal activity has been detected in the water column and at the seafloor along nearly all ridge segments. An exception is the 500-km-long Knipovich Ridge, from where, until now, no hydrothermal vents were known. Here we report the investigation of the first hydrothermal vent field of the Knipovich Ridge, which was discovered in July 2022 during expedition MSM109.

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Article Synopsis
  • Iron (Fe) is a crucial trace element for life, but its availability in the ocean can be very limited or extremely high, which affects microbial communities differently.* -
  • Experiments show that while certain microbes like Campylobacterota thrive at lower Fe concentrations, a high concentration of 10 mM leads to dominance by the SUP05 clade, which is adapted to high-Fe environments.* -
  • The study highlights that hydrothermal microbes can produce Fe-binding ligands that help with Fe uptake in low concentrations and detoxification in high concentrations, suggesting their role in maintaining Fe in solution despite toxic conditions.*
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Hydrothermal plumes transport reduced chemical species and metals into the open ocean. Despite their considerable spatial scale and impact on biogeochemical cycles, niche differentiation of abundant microbial clades is poorly understood. Here, we analyzed the microbial ecology of two bathy- (Brothers volcano; BrV-cone and northwest caldera; NWC) and a mesopelagic (Macauley volcano; McV) plumes on the Kermadec intra-oceanic arc in the South Pacific Ocean.

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The microbial community composition and its functionality was assessed for hydrothermal fluids and volcanic ash sediments from Haungaroa and hydrothermal fluids from the Brothers volcano in the Kermadec island arc (New Zealand). The Haungaroa volcanic ash sediments were dominated by epsilonproteobacterial sp. Ratios of electron donor consumption to CO fixation from respective sediment incubations indicated that sulfide oxidation appeared to fuel autotrophic CO fixation, coinciding with thermodynamic estimates predicting sulfide oxidation as the major energy source in the environment.

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