Life (Dec 2012)

Pavilion Lake Microbialites: Morphological, Molecular and Biochemical Evidence for a Cold-Water Transition to Colonial Aggregates

  • Allyson Brady,
  • Louis N. Irwin,
  • Donnie Reid,
  • Olivia Chan,
  • Stephen B. Pointing,
  • Darlene Lim,
  • Bernard Laval,
  • Carol Turse,
  • Marina Resendes de Sousa António,
  • Dirk Schulze-Makuch

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/life3010021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 1
pp. 21 – 37

Abstract

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The presence of microbialite structures in a freshwater, dimictic mid-latitudelake and their establishment after the last ice age about 10,000 years ago is puzzling.Freshwater calcite microbialites at Pavilion Lake, British Columbia, Canada, consist of acomplex community of microorganisms that collectively form large, ordered structuredaggregates. This distinctive assemblage of freshwater calcite microbialites was studied through standard microbial methods, morphological observations, phospholipid fatty acid(PLFA) analysis, DNA sequencing and the identification of quorum sensing molecules.Our results suggest that the microbialites may represent a transitional form from theexclusively prokaryotic colonial precursors of stromatolites to the multicellular organismicaggregates that give rise to coral reefs.

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