Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors' Preface
- Isotopic-labelling methods for deciphering the function of uncultured micro-organisms
- Biofilms and metal geochemistry: the relevance of micro-organism-induced geochemical transformations
- Minerals, mats, pearls and veils: themes and variations in giant sulfur bacteria
- Soil micro-organisms in Antarctic dry valleys: resource supply and utilization
- New insights into bacterial cell-wall structure and physico-chemistry: implications for interactions with metal ions and minerals
- Horizontal gene transfer of metal homeostasis genes and its role in microbial communities of the deep terrestrial subsurface
- Biosilicification: the role of cyanobacteria in silica sinter deposition
- Metabolic diversity in the microbial world: relevance to exobiology
- Biogeochemical cycling in polar, temperate and tropical coastal zones: similarities and differences
- Fungal roles and function in rock, mineral and soil transformations
- The deep intraterrestrial biosphere
- Iron, nitrogen, phosphorus and zinc cycling and consequences for primary productivity in the oceans
- Mechanisms and environmental impact of microbial metal reduction
- New insights into the physiology and regulation of the anaerobic oxidation of methane
- Biogeochemical roles of fungi in marine and estuarine habitats
- Role of micro-organisms in karstification
- Index
Soil micro-organisms in Antarctic dry valleys: resource supply and utilization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 July 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Editors' Preface
- Isotopic-labelling methods for deciphering the function of uncultured micro-organisms
- Biofilms and metal geochemistry: the relevance of micro-organism-induced geochemical transformations
- Minerals, mats, pearls and veils: themes and variations in giant sulfur bacteria
- Soil micro-organisms in Antarctic dry valleys: resource supply and utilization
- New insights into bacterial cell-wall structure and physico-chemistry: implications for interactions with metal ions and minerals
- Horizontal gene transfer of metal homeostasis genes and its role in microbial communities of the deep terrestrial subsurface
- Biosilicification: the role of cyanobacteria in silica sinter deposition
- Metabolic diversity in the microbial world: relevance to exobiology
- Biogeochemical cycling in polar, temperate and tropical coastal zones: similarities and differences
- Fungal roles and function in rock, mineral and soil transformations
- The deep intraterrestrial biosphere
- Iron, nitrogen, phosphorus and zinc cycling and consequences for primary productivity in the oceans
- Mechanisms and environmental impact of microbial metal reduction
- New insights into the physiology and regulation of the anaerobic oxidation of methane
- Biogeochemical roles of fungi in marine and estuarine habitats
- Role of micro-organisms in karstification
- Index
Summary
INTRODUCTION
In 1903, the explorer Robert Scott was one of the first humans ever to see the dry valleys of Antarctica. He called them ‘valley(s) of the dead’ in which ‘we have seen no sign of life, … not even a moss or lichen’. A century later, we know that the soils and rocks are home to many microscopic organisms that Scott could not have seen.
The dry valleys are part of the small percentage of the land surface of the Antarctic continent that is ice-free, amounting to about 4000 km2, and thus have rock and soil surfaces that can be colonized by terrestrial organisms. They are an ancient polar desert, perhaps as much as 2 million years old, located in Victoria Land between about 77 and 79° south (Fig. 1). The valleys are in a precipitation shadow caused by the Transantarctic Mountains, which rise over 4000 m. The Antarctic dry valleys are now recognized as one of the harshest terrestrial environments on Earth, characterized by summer maximum temperatures that rarely exceed 0 °C and only a few tens of millimetres of precipitation, most of which falls as snow and is ablated by strong winds carrying dry air from the polar plateau - potential evaporation far exceeds precipitation (Fig. 1).
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- Micro-organisms and Earth Systems , pp. 71 - 84Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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