Fossil DNA for a better understanding of climate variations
Fluctuations in cyanobacterial populations could help us to better understand previous and current climate variations. However, these organisms do not easily fossilize and generally do not resist the passing of time very well. Nonetheless, the extraction and sequencing of their DNA present in layers of sediment could satisfy the curiosity of paleolimnologists and biologists. This new method, developed by researchers in Liege, was applied to sediment cores taken from the bottom of two lakes in the Antarctic Peninsula. The method has made it possible to attest to the presence of bacteria in the two lakes for more than 3,000 years and to demonstrate variations in their diversity at certain periods. It remains to be established whether the cause of the variations in diversity of these DNA sequences is of climatic origin or if it is due to poor or good conservation processes according to the species in question.
Towards a new paleolimnological markerThe work of the two researchers was part of a wider analysis of sediment cores taken from the bottom of two lakes in the Antarctic Peninsula, Beak 1 and Beak 2, both of which are on the same island. With depths of 26 meters for Beak 1 and 4 meters for Beak 2, the lakes are frozen for 8 months of the year, reaching temperatures of between 4 and 12 degrees Celsius during the austral summer. However, photosynthetic communities of bacteria thrive there, as there are no other living organisms to affect their development. Cyanobacteria develop better in Lake Beak 2 which is shallower and sunnier. ![]() (1) Rafael Fernández-Carazo, Elie Verleyen, Dominique A. Hodgson, Stephen J. Roberts, Krzysztof Waleron, Wim Vyverman, Annick Wilmotte, Late Holocene changes in Cyanobacterial community structure in maritime Antarctic lakes, Journal of Paleolimnology (Springer), published online: 12 march 2013 |
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