The composition and macroscopic structure of the floating oxygenic phototrophic communities from Kulunda steppe soda lakes (Cock Soda Lake, Tanatar VI, and Bitter Lake 3) was described based on the data of the 2011 and 2012 expeditions (Winogradsky Institute of Microbiology). The algo-bacterial commu nity with a green alga Ctenocladus circinnatus as an edificator was the typical one. Filamentous Geitlerinema sp. and Nodosilinea sp. were the dominant cyanobacteria. Apart from C. circinnatus, the algological compo nent of the community contained unicellular green algae Dunaliella viridis and cf. Chlorella minutissima, as well as diatoms (Anomoeoneis sphaerophora, Brachysira brebissonii, Brachysira zellensis, Mastogloia pusilla var. subcapitata, Nitzschia amphibia, Nitzschia communis, and Nitzschia sp.1). The latter have not been previ ously identified in the lakes under study. In all lakes, a considerable increase in salinity was found to result in changes in the composition and macroscopic structure of algo-bacterial communities.
Filamentous cyanobacteria belonging to the ‘marine Geitlerinema’ cluster are spread worldwide in saline environments and considered to play an important ecological role. However, the taxonomy of this group remains unclear. Here, we analyzed the phylogeny, ecology and biogeography of the ‘marine Geitlerinema’ cluster representatives and revealed two subclusters: 1) an ‘oceanic’ subcluster containing PCC7105 clade and BBD clade with free-living and pathogenic strains distributed in Atlantic, Indian and Pacific Ocean-related localities, and 2) a Sodalinema subcluster containing free-living strains from marine, hypersaline, saline-alkaline and soda lake habitats from the Eurasian and African continents. Polyphasic analysis using genetic and phenotypic criteria demonstrated that these two groups represent separate genera. Representatives of Sodalinema subcluster were phylogenetically attributed to the genus Sodalinema. Our data expand the ecological and geographical distribution of this genus. We emended the description of the genus Sodalinema and proposed three new species differing in phylogenetic, geographic and ecological criteria: Sodalinema orleanskyi sp. nov., Sodalinema gerasimenkoae sp. nov. and Sodalinema stali sp. nov. Additionally, a new genus and species Baaleninema simplex gen. et sp. nov. was discribed within the PCC7105 clade. By this, we put in order the current confusion of the ‘marine Geitlerinema’ group and highlight its ecological diversity.
Bitter-1 is a shallow hypersaline soda lake in Kulunda Steppe (Altai region, Russia). During a study period between 2005 and 2016, the salinity in the littoral area of the lake fluctuated within the range from 85 to 400 g/L (in July of each year). Light-dependent nitrogen fixation occurred in this lake up to the salt-saturating conditions. The rates increased with a decrease in salinity, both under environmental conditions and in laboratory simulations. The salinities below 100 g/L were favorable for light-dependent nitrogen fixation, while the process was dramatically inhibited above 200 g/L salts. The analysis of nifH genes in environmental samples and in enrichment cultures of diazotrophic phototrophs suggested that anaerobic fermenting and sulfate-reducing bacteria could participate in the dark nitrogen fixation process up to soda-saturating conditions. However, we cannot exclude the possibility that haloalkaliphilic nonheterocystous cyanobacteria (Euhalothece sp. and Geitlerinema sp.) and anoxygenic purple sulfur bacteria (Ectothiorhodospira sp.) might also play a role in the process at light conditions. The heterocystous cyanobacterium Nodularia sp. develops at low salinity (below 80 g/L) that is not characteristic for Bitter-1 Lake and thus does not make a significant contribution to the nitrogen fixation in this lake.
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