A. Wilmotte’s research while affiliated with University of Liège and other places

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Publications (324)


Advances and shortfalls in knowledge of Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater biodiversity
  • Literature Review

February 2025

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449 Reads

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1 Citation

Science

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A Barbosa

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Antarctica harbors many distinctive features of life, yet much about the diversity and functioning of Antarctica’s life remains unknown. Evolutionary histories and functional ecology are well understood only for vertebrates, whereas research on invertebrates is largely limited to species descriptions and some studies on environmental tolerances. Knowledge on Antarctic vegetation cover showcases the challenges of characterizing population trends for most groups. Recent community-level microbial studies have provided insights into the functioning of life at its limits. Overall, biotic interactions remain largely unknown across all groups, restricted to basic information on trophic level placement. Insufficient knowledge of many groups limits the understanding of ecological processes on the continent. Remedies for the current situation rely on identifying the caveats of each ecological discipline and finding targeted solutions. Such precise delimitation of knowledge gaps will enable a more aware, representative, and strategic systematic conservation planning of Antarctica.


Education and outreach activities by the Antarctic Treaty Parties: topics and target audiences

December 2024

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38 Reads

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2 Citations

Antarctic Science

The relevance of education and outreach (E&O) activities about the Antarctic Treaty has been recognized at the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Meetings (ATCM) and at the Committee for Environmental Protection (CEP). This study examines the key topics and the target audiences detailed in papers submitted to the ATCM on E&O. Since the Antarctic Treaty entered into force in 1961, a total of 216 ATCM papers on E&O have been produced. The number of papers has increased substantially since the mid-1990s. ‘Science’ (76.9%) and ‘Wildlife/Biodiversity/Environment’ (75.5%) were the most addressed topics in these papers, while the ‘Public’ (81.0%) and those attending ‘Schools’ (69.0%) are the main target audiences. ‘Science’ in ATCM papers increased ~120-fold from 1961–1997 to 2015–2023, while ATCM papers discussing engagement with the ‘Public’ increased ~40-fold during the same period. ‘Climate change’ was first mentioned in 2006, and the number of papers per year increased fourfold by 2015–2023. This study shows the increasing interest in E&O through time, addressing key topics to relevant audiences related to the Antarctic region. From an educational perspective, attention should be paid to emerging topics (e.g. equity, diversity and inclusion), and the engagement of early-career professionals and educators should be made a priority.


(A) metaMDS on the Bray–Curtis similarity matrix based on Hellinger transformed abundance data based on OTUs. Shapes represent the three main regions: Maritime Antarctica, Continental Antarctica and sub‐Antarctic islands . Red curves represent the ordisurf function (R package ‘vegan') fitting of generalized additive model (GAM) of latitude on the metaMDS ordination. (B) metaMDS as in (A). Colors represent the different ACBRs or sub‐Antarctic regions investigated. (C) Map showing the sampling locations. The pie charts present the relative abundance of the different morphological types in each ACBRs. The numbers at the center of the pie charts represent the number of investigated samples in this study for each region.
Addition of latitude in the variation partitioning revealing its correlation with spatial parameter (in grey: 7% on the 14% of PCNMs). PCNMs (principal coordinate of neigborhood matrix) are eigenvectors ranged from large spatial scales (PCNM1) to fine spatial scale (PCNM*). Variation partitioning was calculated in R studio using function varpart (‘vegan' package, ver. 2.5‐7; Oksanen et al. 2019).
Comparison of the 75 Antarctic and 14 sub‐Antarctic cyanobacterial communities. (A) The relative abundance of the different morphotypes of ‘abundant' OTUs (i.e. OTUs encompassing > 90% of the total OTU counts) and the ‘rare fraction' (i.e. those encompassing < 1% of the total OUT counts) in Antarctic (upper panel) and sub‐Antarctic lakes (lower panel). Colors represent the OTU morphotypes. ‘Unknown' morphotype corresponds to OTUs whose taxonomic rank identification was too high (e.g. family) to discriminate between one or another morphological trait. (B) The proportion of ‘endemic', ‘alpine', ‘polar' and ‘cosmopolitan' OTUs (expressed as number of OTUs) in the ‘abundant' and ‘rare' fraction of Antarctic and sub‐Antarctic lakes. (C) The number of ‘endemic', ‘alpine', ‘polar' and ‘cosmopolitan' OTUs occurring in 1, 2, …10 ACBRs (i.e. the occupancy). (D) The proportion of ‘endemic', ‘alpine', ‘polar' and ‘cosmopolitan' OTUs (expressed as number of reads) in the ‘abundant' and ‘rare' fraction. The color code in (B)–(D) represents the geographic distribution of the OTUs.
(Sub‐)Antarctic endemic cyanobacteria from benthic mats are rare and have restricted geographic distributions
  • Article
  • Full-text available

September 2024

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226 Reads

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1 Citation

The Antarctic terrestrial macrobiota are highly endemic and biogeographically structured, but whether this also holds true for microbial groups remains poorly understood. We studied the biogeographic patterns of Antarctic cyanobacteria from benthic microbial mats sampled in 84 lakes from two sub‐Antarctic islands, as well as from eight Antarctic Conservation Biogeographic Regions (ACBRs) which were previously defined based mainly on macroscopic taxa. Analysis of 16S rRNA gene sequences revealed that Antarctic and sub‐Antarctic lakes host significantly different cyanobacterial communities, yet that the bioregionalization pattern did not correspond to the division into ACBRs. Both Antarctic and sub‐Antarctic lakes contain a high number of potentially endemic taxa (41% of the total diversity), of which 33.3% attain a relative abundance of < 1%. Our findings highlight the uniqueness of Antarctic microbiota and the need for increased protection of inland waters in both Antarctica and the sub‐Antarctic islands.

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Ecophysiological and genomic approaches to cyanobacterial hardening for restoration

February 2024

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165 Reads

Journal of Phycology

Cyanobacteria inhabit extreme environments, including drylands, providing multiple benefits to the ecosystem. Soil degradation in warm drylands is increasing due to land use intensification. Restoration methods adapted to the extreme stress in drylands are being developed, such as cyanobacteria inoculation to recover biocrusts. For this type of restoration method to be a success, it is crucial to optimize the survival of inoculated cyanobacteria in the field. One strategy is to harden them to be acclimated to stressful conditions after laboratory culturing. Here, we analyzed the genome and ecophysiological response to osmotic desiccation and UVR stresses of an Antarctic cyanobacterium, Stenomitos frigidus ULC029, which is closely related to other cyanobacteria from warm and cold dryland soils. Chlorophyll a concentrations showed that preculturing ULC029 under moderate osmotic stress improved its survival during an assay of desiccation plus rehydration under UVR. Additionally, its sequential exposure to these stress factors increased the production of exopolysaccharides, carotenoids, and scytonemin. Desiccation, but not osmotic stress, increased the concentrations of the osmoprotectants trehalose and sucrose. However, osmotic stress might induce the production of other osmoprotectants, for which the complete pathways were observed in the ULC029 genome. In total, 140 genes known to be involved in stress resistance were annotated. Here, we confirm that the sequential application of moderate osmotic stress and dehydration could improve cyanobacterial hardening for soil restoration by inducing several resistance mechanisms. We provide a high‐quality genome of ULC029 and a description of the main resistance mechanisms (i.e., production of exopolysaccharides, osmoprotectants, chlorophyll, and carotenoids; DNA repair; and oxidative stress protection).


(A) Satellite image of Sør Rondane Mountains and sampled sites. (B) In situ photographs of the four types of soil ecosystems investigated. More information about the samples can be found and in Supplementary Figure 1. Contains modified Copernicus Sentinel-2 data [2020] and Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica (LIMA). Colors differ by sampled site. AU, Austkampane; DV, Dry Valley; PB_N, Perlebandet North; PB_S, Perlebandet South; PA4, Pingvinane 4th nunatak; PA6, Pingvinane 6th nunatak; PT, Petrellnuten; UT, Utsteinen; YO, Yûboku-dani Valley.
Relative abundances of the most abundant phyla (> 1% of total abundances) of bacteria per sample, grouped per substrate type. Colors are according to the Phylum (see legend). Sample names indicate the site of origin (see Supplementary Table S1 for details).
Relative abundances of the most abundant phyla (> 1% of total abundances) of eukaryotes per sample, grouped per substrate type. Colors are according to the Division (see legend). Sample names indicate the site of origin (see Supplementary Table S1 for details).
PCoA of 96 and 97 samples of (A) bacteria and (B) eukaryotes. Circles represent gneiss, triangles granite, squares marble and diamonds moraine samples. The percentage explained by the first two axes is given between brackets.
(A) Co-occurrence network analysis based on bacterial and eukaryotic ASVs (dots) across all sampling sites, colored according to the major identified modules in the different substrate types, with positive Spearman correlations > 0.7 plotted as edges. Size of nodes corresponds to the betweenness centrality degree. (B) Phylum-or Division-level taxonomic log-transformed abundance of those ASVs associated with each of the 11 modules, colors represent the abundance of ASVs per module, grey rectangles highlight eukaryotic phyla. (C) Relative abundance (z-score) of ASVs in each module plotted against the most important substrate geochemical variables identified by RF, Spearman correlation and Pearson correlation as the major explanatory variable for that module (p < 0.01, Holm-corrected). Module 5 represented a low number of samples. Modules 2 and 6 correlated well with decreasing TN values, similar to the plotted module 8.
Geology defines microbiome structure and composition in nunataks and valleys of the Sør Rondane Mountains, East Antarctica

February 2024

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221 Reads

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3 Citations

Understanding the relation between terrestrial microorganisms and edaphic factors in the Antarctic can provide insights into their potential response to environmental changes. Here we examined the composition of bacterial and micro-eukaryotic communities using amplicon sequencing of rRNA genes in 105 soil samples from the Sør Rondane Mountains (East Antarctica), differing in bedrock or substrate type and associated physicochemical conditions. Although the two most widespread taxa (Acidobacteriota and Chlorophyta) were relatively abundant in each sample, multivariate analysis and co-occurrence networks revealed pronounced differences in community structure depending on substrate type. In moraine substrates, Actinomycetota and Cercozoa were the most abundant bacterial and eukaryotic phyla, whereas on gneiss, granite and marble substrates, Cyanobacteriota and Metazoa were the dominant bacterial and eukaryotic taxa. However, at lower taxonomic level, a distinct differentiation was observed within the Cyanobacteriota phylum depending on substrate type, with granite being dominated by the Nostocaceae family and marble by the Chroococcidiopsaceae family. Surprisingly, metazoans were relatively abundant according to the 18S rRNA dataset, even in samples from the most arid sites, such as moraines in Austkampane and Widerøefjellet (“Dry Valley”). Overall, our study shows that different substrate types support distinct microbial communities, and that mineral soil diversity is a major determinant of terrestrial microbial diversity in inland Antarctic nunataks and valleys.


Biodiversity checklist compilation protocol.
Basic Antarctic Tree of Life. Some lesser animal phyla with less than five species total are not visually depicted (e.g. Annelida).
TerrANTALife 1.0 Biodiversity data checklist of known Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater life forms

February 2024

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622 Reads

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6 Citations

Background Incomplete species inventories for Antarctica represent a key challenge for comprehensive ecological research and conservation in the region. Additionally, data required to understand population dynamics, rates of evolution, spatial ranges, functional traits, physiological tolerances and species interactions, all of which are fundamental to disentangle the different functional elements of Antarctic biodiversity, are mostly missing. However, much of the fauna, flora and microbiota in the emerged ice-free land of the continent have an uncertain presence and/or unresolved status, with entire biodiversity compendia of prokaryotic groups (e.g. bacteria) being missing. All the available biodiversity information requires consolidation, cross-validation, re-assessment and steady systematic inclusion in order to create a robust catalogue of biodiversity for the continent. New information We compiled, completed and revised eukaryotic species inventories present in terrestrial and freshwater ecosystems in Antarctica in a new living database: terrANTALife (version 1.0). The database includes the first integration in a compendium for many groups of eukaryotic microorganisms. We also introduce a first catalogue of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) of prokaryotic biodiversity. Available compendia and literature to date were searched for Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater species, integrated, taxonomically harmonised and curated by experts to create comprehensive checklists of Antarctic organisms. The final inventories comprises 470 animal species (including vertebrates, free-living invertebrates and parasites), 306 plants (including all Viridiplantae: embryophytes and green algae), 997 fungal species and 434 protists (sensu lato). We also provide a first account for many groups of microorganisms, including non-lichenised fungi and multiple groups of eukaryotic unicellular species (Stramenophila, Alveolata and Rhizaria (SAR), Chromists and Amoeba), jointly referred to as "protists". In addition, we identify 1753 bacterial (obtained from 348117 ASVs) and 34 archaeal genera (from 1848 ASVs), as well as, at least, 14 virus families. We formulate a basic tree of life in Antarctica with the main lineages listed in the region and their “known-accepted-species” numbers.


Fig. 2. Polar lake catchments and microbial consortia. (A to D) Examples and comparison of typical lake and pond catchments in polar deserts in (A) Svalbard, High Arctic and (B) Schirmacher Oasis, East Antarctica, and low latitude wet tundra in (C) Nuuk, Greenland and (D) sub-Antarctic Marion Island. (E and F) High latitude benthic lacustrine microbial mats in (E) Svalbard and (F) Skarvsnes, East Antarctica. [Photographs courtesy of J. Elster (A), E. Verleyen (B), K. Sabbe (C), D. A. Hodgson (D), D. Velazquez (E), and S. Kudoh (F).]
Fig. 3. The proportion of unique and shared OTUs, ASVs, and phylotypes and biogeographic clustering for the main taxonomic groups of lacustrine microorganisms in the polar regions. (A) The phylogenetic clades (phylum level) that represent at least 0.1% of the sequences are shown in the synthesized cladogram, with clade branches that represent at least 1% of the total number of sequences terminating in the center figure (branch lengths are meaningless). The bar plots show the proportion of unique (i.e., restricted to one single region) or shared OTUs for the different sequence similarity cutoffs (percentage identity) used with the UPARSE algorithm. Bars toward the plot center represent lower cutoff values (81% for the innermost bar). The three outermost bars correspond to phylotypes, UPARSE OTUs clustered at 99% sequence identity, and ASVs, respectively. The clustering according to the CAP analysis for each major phylum at the OTU 97% cutoff level is added on the outside, including the overall correct classification rate (CCR), representing how well samples are clustered into the three biogeographic regions (see table S2). The colors highlighting the phylum names denote the functional guild to which they belong as used in Fig. 1. (B) The CCR (means ± SD) at the domain level for Eukarya and Bacteria for each region across all OTU sequence similarity cutoff levels showing the strong biogeographic clustering into the three regions even at higher-order taxonomic levels.
Fig. 4. Modeled lineage through time plots showing the smooth function of the regionally unique UPARSE OTUs clustered at the different thresholds. The differences in amplicon richness ratios (i.e., the relative increase in the number of OTUs unique for a region at a higher similarity level compared to those at the preceding similarity level) for the 16 major eukaryotic (A) and bacterial (B) phyla are shown as a pairwise comparison between regions. Differences in this richness ratio of unique taxa between regions are significant (*) when the confidence bands do not include "zero" (horizontal red line). If the difference is positive (confidence band, >0), then there is a higher amplicon richness ratio (or net diversification rate) for the left-hand region in the column title, while the richness ratio is higher for the right-hand region when the difference is negative (confidence band, <0). Phyla are grouped according to the different functional guilds. Functional group sidebar colors as in Fig. 1.
Polar lake microbiomes have distinct evolutionary histories

November 2023

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430 Reads

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9 Citations

Science Advances

Toward the poles, life on land is increasingly dominated by microorganisms, yet the evolutionary origin of polar microbiomes remains poorly understood. Here, we use metabarcoding of Arctic, sub-Antarctic, and Antarctic lacustrine benthic microbial communities to test the hypothesis that high-latitude microbiomes are recruited from a globally dispersing species pool through environmental selection. We demonstrate that taxonomic overlap between the regions is limited within most phyla, even at higher-order taxonomic levels, with unique deep-branching phylogenetic clades being present in each region. We show that local and regional taxon richness and net diversification rate of regionally restricted taxa differ substantially between polar regions in both microeukaryotic and bacterial biota. This suggests that long-term evolutionary divergence resulting from low interhemispheric dispersal and diversification in isolation has been a prominent process shaping present-day polar lake microbiomes. Our findings illuminate the distinctive biogeography of polar lake ecosystems and underscore that conservation efforts should include their unique microbiota.


Ecophysiological and genomic approaches to cyanobacterial hardening for soil restoration

September 2023

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179 Reads

Cyanobacteria inhabit extreme environments, including drylands, providing multiple benefits to the ecosystem. Soil degradation in warm drylands is increasing due to land-use intensification. Restoration methods adapted to the strong stress in drylands are being developed, i.e. cyanobacterial inoculation to recover biocrusts. For success, it is crucial to optimize the survival of inoculated cyanobacterial in field. One strategy is to harden them to be re-adapted to stressful conditions after laboratory culturing. Here, we analyzed the genome and ecophysiological response to osmotic, desiccation and UVR stresses of an Antarctic cyanobacterium, Stenomitos frigidus ULC029, closely related to other cyanobacteria from warm and cold dryland soils. Chlorophyll a concentrations show that preculturing ULC029 under moderate osmotic stress improved its survival during an assay of desiccation plus rehydration under UVR. Besides, its sequential exposition to these stress factors increased the production of exopolysaccharides, carotenoids and scytonemin. Desiccation, but not osmotic stress, increased the concentrations of the osmoprotectants, trehalose and sucrose. However, osmotic stress might induce the production of other osmoprotectants, for which the complete pathways were found in the ULC029 genome. In total, 140 genes known to be involved in stress resistance were annotated and could potentially help ULC029 under stress. Here, we confirm that the sequential application of moderate osmotic stress and dehydration, could improve cyanobacterial hardening for soil restoration, by inducing several resistance mechanisms. We provide a high-quality genome of ULC029 and a description of the main resistance mechanisms found (i.e. production of exopolysaccharides, osmoprotectants, chlorophyll and carotenoids; DNA repair; oxidative stress protection).


Properties of exopolymeric substances (EPSs) produced during cyanobacterial growth: potential role in whiting events

August 2023

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71 Reads

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8 Citations

Extracellular polymeric substances (EPSs) are an important organic carbon reservoir in many pelagic and benthic environments. The production of EPS is intimately associated with the growth of phyto- and picoplankton. EPS plays a critical role in carbonate precipitation through the binding of cations and by acting as a nucleation site for minerals. Large-scale episodes of fine-grained calcium carbonate precipitation in the water column (whiting events) have been linked to cyanobacterial blooms, including of Synechococcus spp. The mechanisms that trigger these precipitation events are still debated. We pose that the cyanobacterial EPS, produced during exponential and stationary growth phases, plays a critical role in the formation of whitings. The aim of this study was to investigate the production of EPS during a 2-month cyanobacterial growth, mimicking a bloom. The production and characteristics of EPS were examined in different growth stages of Synechococcus spp. using various techniques such as Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectroscopy as well as colorimetric and sodium dodecyl sulfate–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS–PAGE) assays. We further evaluated the potential role of EPS in carbonate precipitation through in vitro-forced precipitation experiments. EPS produced during the early and late stationary phase contained a larger amount of negatively charged groups than present in EPS produced during the exponential phase. Consequently, a higher Ca2+-binding affinity of the stationary-phase EPS led to the formation of a larger amount of smaller carbonate minerals (< 50 µm) compared to crystals formed in exponential-phase EPS, which were less abundant and larger (> 50 µm). These findings were used to establish a conceptual model for picoplankton-bloom-mediated CaCO3 precipitation that can explain the role of EPS in whitings.


Fig. 2. Phylogenetic analysis of 37 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) assigned to the phylum Cyanobacteria, including both Cyanobacteria stricto sensu (clade Oxyphotobacteria) and the Melainabacteria. Maximum-likelihood tree (LG+R8 model) based on a concatenated alignment of 38 ribosomal proteins from the MAGs (in bold), their closest neighbours in GenBank, PCC strains and other selected genomes. The geographical origins of polar MAGs and strains are indicated. Order-level classification is shown according to the taxonomic system of Komárek et al. [66]. The scale bar indicates the number of amino acid changes per site.
Fig. 3. Presence of genes involved in carbon fixation, photosynthesis, nitrogen cycle and circadian clock in 37 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of Cyanobacteria stricto sensu (clade Oxyphotobacteria) and Melainabacteria.
Fig. 4. Candidatus Sivonenia alaskensis, a lineage of early branching Cyanobacteria in the order Gloeobacterales. (a) Maximum-likelihood tree (LG+R8 model) based on a concatenated alignment of 38 ribosomal proteins from the three Ca. Sivonenia alaskensis MAGs (in bold) and other Gloeobacterales and selected genomes from GenBank. All nodes have bootstrap support ≥95 %. The scale bar indicates the number of amino acid changes per site. (b) Maximum-likelihood tree (GTR+F+R8 model) of the 16S rRNA gene of Ca. Sivonenia alaskensis. Nodes have bootstrap support ≥95 % unless shown otherwise. The scale bar indicates the number of nucleotide changes per site. (c) Geographical distribution of Ca. Sivonenia alaskensis based on significant matches with metagenomic and 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing datasets in SRA (≥20 % containment and ≥0.1 % relative abundance, respectively).
Novel diversity of polar Cyanobacteria revealed by genome-resolved metagenomics

July 2023

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406 Reads

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16 Citations

Microbial Genomics

Benthic microbial mats dominated by Cyanobacteria are important features of polar lakes. Although culture-independent studies have provided important insights into the diversity of polar Cyanobacteria, only a handful of genomes have been sequenced to date. Here, we applied a genome-resolved metagenomics approach to data obtained from Arctic, sub-Antarctic and Antarctic microbial mats. We recovered 37 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) of Cyanobacteria representing 17 distinct species, most of which are only distantly related to genomes that have been sequenced so far. These include (i) lineages that are common in polar microbial mats such as the filamentous taxa Pseudanabaena, Leptolyngbya, Microcoleus/Tychonema and Phormidium; (ii) the less common taxa Crinalium and Chamaesiphon; (iii) an enigmatic Chroococcales lineage only distantly related to Microcystis; and (iv) an early branching lineage in the order Gloeobacterales that is distributed across the cold biosphere, for which we propose the name Candidatus Sivonenia alaskensis. Our results show that genome-resolved metagenomics is a powerful tool for expanding our understanding of the diversity of Cyanobacteria, especially in understudied remote and extreme environments.


Citations (50)


... Enhancing monitoring efforts, including colony densities counts will provide a better understanding of the outbreak status and its impact on the Antarctic seabirds. Long term systematic monitoring of biodiversity in Antarctica has been suggested to be crucial for conservation practice (Pertierra et al., in 2025). Continuous monitoring of migratory birds through movement ecology analysis will allow for greater insight into the sites of infection and help identify surrounding variants in the Antarctic region, as well as the virus's evolutionary potential and its relation to pathogenicity. ...

Reference:

Skuas mortalities linked to positives HPAIV A/H5 beyond Polar Antarctic Circle
Advances and shortfalls in knowledge of Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater biodiversity
  • Citing Article
  • February 2025

Science

... Increasingly, the Antarctic sector is recognizing the importance of public engagement. The Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) and the Council of Managers of National Antarctic Programs (COMNAP) both have groups dedicated to engagement, and the Antarctic Treaty Consultative Parties established an Intersessional Contact Group on Education and Outreach in 2015 (Secretariat of the Antarctic Treaty 2015, Xavier et al. 2019Xavier et al. , 2024. As Salmon & Roop (2019) point out, however, the sector's efforts towards public engagement are often stymied by a lack of strategy. ...

Education and outreach activities by the Antarctic Treaty Parties: topics and target audiences
  • Citing Article
  • December 2024

Antarctic Science

... PCC6803 ( Han et al., 2013 ). Extracellular polymeric compounds generated during the early and late stationary phases contain higher concentrations of negatively charged groups than those formed during the exponential phase ( Martinho De Brito et al., 2023 ). This increase enhances the Ca 2 +binding affinity of stationary-phase extracellular polymeric substances, leading to the formation of a greater number of smaller carbonate minerals ( < 50 μm). ...

Properties of exopolymeric substances (EPSs) produced during cyanobacterial growth: potential role in whiting events

... While this phylum predominates in some soils [95,97,98], it appears in lower abundances in others [99,100], suggesting sensitivity to specific environmental factors. Additionally, recent research has indicated a preference for alkaline soils by Bacteroidota in Antarctica [101], which is consistent with our finding of increased abundance of these bacteria in the soils with higher pH beneath the Prasiola canopy. ...

Geology defines microbiome structure and composition in nunataks and valleys of the Sør Rondane Mountains, East Antarctica

... Complete species inventories are critical for comprehensive investigations of the prevailing biological patterns and processes in the region. Very recently, the Ter-rANTALife 1.0 Biodiversity database has been established, containing many of Antarctica's terrestrial and freshwater life forms, including various animal species, plants, fungi, protists, prokaryotic and viral taxa 93 . Other public repositories, such as the NCBI and ENA, are available where one can find several Antarctic microbial datasets. ...

TerrANTALife 1.0 Biodiversity data checklist of known Antarctic terrestrial and freshwater life forms

... In addition, the observed morphological and ITS2 variation from Robert Island suggests the presence of a distinct Antarctic or Southern Hemisphere Ancylonema diversity. The distribution of Robert Island haplotypes amongst regional-endemic and cosmopolitan clades aligns with other examples of Antarctic microbial endemism 56,57 and raises intriguing questions about biogeographic patterns, refugia, and divergence histories in cryophilic Ancylonema. Whether Antarctica represents a 'cryo-refugia' for ice-dependant lineages of microalgae and whether additional diversity and regional variation remain to be discovered amongst Antarctic cryoflora, will depend on further sampling and analysis of glacial communities from elsewhere in Antarctica and the Southern Hemisphere. ...

Polar lake microbiomes have distinct evolutionary histories

Science Advances

... Despite identification of numerous phytoplankton populations via flow cytometry including cyanobacteria, prymnesiophytes and cryptophytes in the surface waters, their populations did not translate to the sequencing data where total relative abundances of affiliated ASVs were generally < 1% of the eukaryotic and prokaryotic community. Cyanobacterial genomes from polar regions are generally underrepresented in public databases (Lumian et al. 2022;Pessi et al. 2023) despite their ecological importance. Moreover, their abundances are low relative to the total number of prokaryotes, restricting their detection through amplicon sequencing. ...

Novel diversity of polar Cyanobacteria revealed by genome-resolved metagenomics

Microbial Genomics

... At the moment of writing this report, another specific workflow (GENcontams.nf) to measure the quality of MAGs through multiple tools is available, which is part of the GEN-ERA toolbox (Cornet et al., 2022). Among the advantages of this package, we can enumerate the inclusion of tools that MAGFlow currently lacks, such as Physeter, Kraken2 and EukCC, the wide control the user can apply over the parameters to run the software, as well as the integration with the GEN-ERA suite. ...

The GEN-ERA toolbox: unified and reproducible workflows for research in microbial genomics

GigaScience

... In terrestrial glacier foreland ecosystems, microbial communities are similarly crucial in establishing early trophic interactions, thereby supporting detritivore communities and larger invertebrate herbivores and predators such as beetles, spiders and flies 56,72,109,[112][113][114] . Besides trophic interactions, mutualistic interactions between pioneer plants and nitrogen-fixing symbiotic bacteria are crucial for facilitating the establishment of less-specialized plant and animal species by stabilizing sediments, retaining water, increasing organic matter and nutrients, and providing food resources and habitat for invertebrates 73,77,89,115 , thus ultimately increasing biodiversity. ...

Threat management priorities for conserving Antarctic biodiversity

... Specifically, a Waters Acquity UPLC H-class was used, connected to a Xevo TQ-S (Waters, Milford, MA, USA). A Waters Acquity BEH C18 column (1.7 µm, 2.1 mm × 100 mm) was used to separate the toxins, as published earlier [18,47,54,55,71,72]. Fortified samples for every matrix were used as quality control during each analytical run. ...

LC-MS/MS Validation and Quantification of Cyanotoxins in Algal Food Supplements from the Belgium Market and Their Molecular Origins