2020
DOI: 10.1002/essoar.10502548.1
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Microbial genomics of the global ocean system

Abstract: With this array of transformational "omics" tools, scientists gained valuable insight into how microbes responded to the hydrocarbon infusion and restored ecosystem health. Many novel species, genes, metabolic pathways, and community dynamics that are instrumental to hydrocarbon The contents reflect the views of the participants and are not intended to reflect official positions of the Academy, ASM, AGU and GoMRI.

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Cited by 17 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…Sulfate is typically present in higher concentration than the other electron acceptors, leading to the domination of sulfate reduction in anaerobic metabolism in these systems. However, biologically mediated reactions occur in tandem with abiotic reactions, making it difficult in some cases to assess the driving force behind the observed biogeochemical reactions (Joye and Kostka, 2020).…”
Section: Biogeochemical Reactions In Coastal Aquifersmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Sulfate is typically present in higher concentration than the other electron acceptors, leading to the domination of sulfate reduction in anaerobic metabolism in these systems. However, biologically mediated reactions occur in tandem with abiotic reactions, making it difficult in some cases to assess the driving force behind the observed biogeochemical reactions (Joye and Kostka, 2020).…”
Section: Biogeochemical Reactions In Coastal Aquifersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are a number of ways to assess the importance of abiotic versus microbially mediated processes in aquifers. Assessing microbial community composition using genomics data (Joye and Kostka, 2020) provides information on genomic capacity for a particular reaction by tracking gene abundance (e.g., probing for genes or assessing metagenomes) or by tracking the presence of transcripts associated with a particular process (e.g., metatranscriptomics). While some studies utilized such techniques in coastal aquifers (Santoro et al, 2006(Santoro et al, , 2008Rogers and Casciotti, 2010;Sáenz et al, 2012;Adyasari et al, 2019Adyasari et al, , 2020, this approach holds tremendous potential.…”
Section: Biogeochemical Reactions In Coastal Aquifersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Despite a recent burst in knowledge and understanding of the diversity, behavior, and function of marine microbial communities in response to hydrocarbon contamination in marine environments ( 4 , 7 9 ), regions like the Arctic, sub-Arctic, and deep ocean basins remain largely underexplored in this respect, due mainly to the challenge of sampling and unpredictability associated with these environments. Past major oil spills (e.g., Exxon Valdez and Deepwater Horizon) highlighted the need for a prerequisite understanding of the structure, diversity, and dynamics of prespill baseline bacterial communities ( 4 , 10 , 11 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…comm.). Such persistent surface oil slicks suggest naturally occurring oil seepage, which may contribute to elevated (above background) levels of an oil-degrading bacterioplankton population, including Alcanivorax , in the FSC; a similar situation is well documented in the Gulf of Mexico [ 64 ]. However, we do not exclude the likelihood that such a community is in part also supported by the close coupling of these organisms with hydrocarbon-producing phytoplankton, such as Synechococcus .…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%