2009
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2427.2008.02013.x
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Microbial biodiversity in groundwater ecosystems

Abstract: Summary 1. Groundwater ecosystems offer vast and complex habitats for diverse microbial communities. Here we review the current status of groundwater microbial biodiversity research with a focus on Bacteria and Archaea and on the prospects of modern techniques for enhancing our understanding of microbial biodiversity patterns and their relation to environmental conditions. 2. The enormous volume of the saturated terrestrial underground forms the largest habitat for microorganisms on earth. Up to 40% of prokary… Show more

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Cited by 481 publications
(441 citation statements)
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References 215 publications
(369 reference statements)
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“…These reactions are related to the degradation of organic matter (Parkes et al 1994(Parkes et al , 2000Whitman et al 1998;Wellsbury et al 2002), rock and mineral weathering and alteration (Rogers et al 1998;Bennett et al 2001;Shock 2009;Gadd 2010), quality of groundwater (Goldscheider et al 2006;Wilson et al 2006;Griebler and Lueders 2009), and failures in engineered subsurface systems caused by corrosion and scaling (Van Hamme et al 2003;Valdez et al 2009;Javaherdashti 2011). Geothermal gradients in the terrestrial crust range from approximately 10°C km -1 to 60°C km -1 (Philpotts 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These reactions are related to the degradation of organic matter (Parkes et al 1994(Parkes et al , 2000Whitman et al 1998;Wellsbury et al 2002), rock and mineral weathering and alteration (Rogers et al 1998;Bennett et al 2001;Shock 2009;Gadd 2010), quality of groundwater (Goldscheider et al 2006;Wilson et al 2006;Griebler and Lueders 2009), and failures in engineered subsurface systems caused by corrosion and scaling (Van Hamme et al 2003;Valdez et al 2009;Javaherdashti 2011). Geothermal gradients in the terrestrial crust range from approximately 10°C km -1 to 60°C km -1 (Philpotts 1990).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Karst aquifer modification can be affected by external mechanisms like climate change that alter the flux of meteoric water into the system (see, e.g., Loáiciga et al, 2000;Loáiciga, 2009), or from internal processes like chemical reactions and microbial activity (see, e.g., Engel et al, 2004). Although microbes have been shown to affect water quality and biogeochemical and ecosystem-level processes in other types of aquifers (Griebler and Lueders, 2009;Kato et al, 2009;Stein et al, 2010;Smith et al, 2011), there has been limited research to define microbial activities that affect aquifer karstification.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Syntrophs specifically form obligate mutualistic interactions with methanogens to metabolize organic compounds whose degradation otherwise rapidly becomes thermodynamically unfavorable (DG40) as by-products accumulate (Schink, 1997;Schink and Stams, 2006). Despite such low-energy conditions, engineered and natural methanogenic environments harbor a wide diversity of uncharacterized microorganisms from known phyla and candidate phyla without cultivated representatives (microbial dark matter; Rinke et al, 2013; also see Juottonen et al, 2005;Nemergut et al, 2008;Griebler and Lueders, 2009;Riviere et al, 2009;Glockner et al, 2010;Kong et al, 2010;Kim et al, 2011;Lykidis et al, 2011;Nelson et al, 2011;Rinke et al, 2013). Their presence indicates many undiscovered microbial niches and interactions.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%