Ikaite is the calcium carbonate hexahydrate (CaCO·6HO), which precipitates below ~ 7 °C, first identified from Ikka Fjord in southwest Greenland and subsequently more widely reported. Here is described the serendipitous discovery of ikaite on a tree (Populus fremontii) wound from the hot Sonoran Desert, which precipitates during short cold periods in the winter, whereas monohydrocalcite forms through most of the year. The tree wound consists of infected wood, called wetwood that exudes a nutrient-rich water on which a jelly-like slime flux forms. Ikaite, along with alpha sulfur, precipitates in and on the bacterial slime flux jelly. Each tree wound occurs as an island of mineralization: all the elements for the mineral formation are supplied through the xylem sap expressed from the wetwood infection. The P. fremontii wetwood is capped and surrounded by a hard mineralized zone dominated by ikaite/monohydrocalcite, alpha sulfur, and a range of carbonates and sulfates, on which the slime flux jelly occurs. Water oozing from the wetwood is modestly alkaline (pH = 8.34), with elevated concentrations of K (5554.7 ppm) and S as SO (1662.9 ppm), with Ca (151.9 ppm) and Mg (270.3 ppm). This water chemistry favors the precipitation of ikaite/monohydrocalcite, both within and below the jelly. The ikaite is temperature sensitive, though the laboratory results show that it can persist for several days at room temperature in the sulfur-rich jelly. The ikaite, and associated mineralization within and around the slime flux jelly, illustrates a new, and likely, global form of bio-mediated mineralization.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00114-022-01818-5 | DOI Listing |
iScience
November 2024
Department of Evolutionary Neuroethology, Max Planck Institute for Chemical Ecology, Jena, Germany.
species belonging to the group offer a unique opportunity for studying olfactory adaptations necessary for survival within forest ecosystems as many of these species breed within decaying plant vascular tissues. However, the knowledge regarding olfactory preferences within their ecological niche is extremely limited. Here, we focus on and identify over 120 distinct odors from a natural slime flux source.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Dis
June 2023
Beijing, Beijing, China;
Calla lily (Zantedeschia hybrida) is widely cultivated as an ornamental plant in China and commonly used as cut flower. Water soaked lesions on the tuber and petiole followed by collapse of entire plant along with foul smell were noticed in a 4-hectare calla lily plantation in the Yanqing District of Beijing, China during August 2022. It was revealed 20%-30% of the plants had these symptoms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaturwissenschaften
September 2022
School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, 781 East Terrace Road, Tempe, AZ, 85287-6004, USA.
Ikaite is the calcium carbonate hexahydrate (CaCO·6HO), which precipitates below ~ 7 °C, first identified from Ikka Fjord in southwest Greenland and subsequently more widely reported. Here is described the serendipitous discovery of ikaite on a tree (Populus fremontii) wound from the hot Sonoran Desert, which precipitates during short cold periods in the winter, whereas monohydrocalcite forms through most of the year. The tree wound consists of infected wood, called wetwood that exudes a nutrient-rich water on which a jelly-like slime flux forms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Resour Announc
March 2021
Institute of Chemical, Environmental and Bioscience Engineering, TU Wien, Vienna, Austria
In this work, we present the whole-genome sequence and the complete mitochondrial sequence of the black yeast-like strain var. CBS 100524, which produces the exopolysaccharide aubasidan and was previously isolated from sp. slime flux from the Leningrad Region of Russia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Robot
April 2019
Department of Biological and Environmental Engineering, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA.
Metabolism is a key process that makes life alive-the combination of anabolism and catabolism sustains life by a continuous flux of matter and energy. In other words, the materials comprising life are synthesized, assembled, dissipated, and decomposed autonomously in a controlled, hierarchical manner using biological processes. Although some biological approaches for creating dynamic materials have been reported, the construction of such materials by mimicking metabolism from scratch based on bioengineering has not yet been achieved.
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