Research output: Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review
A survey of Antarctic cyanobacteria. / Величко, Наталия Владиславовна; Смирнова, Светлана; Аверина, Светлана Геннадиевна; Пиневич, Александр Васильевич.
In: Hydrobiologia, Vol. 848, No. 11, 06.2021, p. 2627-2652.Research output: Contribution to journal › Review article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - A survey of Antarctic cyanobacteria
AU - Величко, Наталия Владиславовна
AU - Смирнова, Светлана
AU - Аверина, Светлана Геннадиевна
AU - Пиневич, Александр Васильевич
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
PY - 2021/6
Y1 - 2021/6
N2 - This review compiles principal data on Antarctic cynobacteria published in recent decades and focuses on the diversity, environmental adaptations, and ecotypes of these microorganisms. Multidisciplinary investigation of Antarctica is important especially in times of global climate change and anthropogenic threats to unaltered ecosystems. Antarctica, which has been disconnected from Gondwana for the last 65 Myr, harbors relict biota mainly including microorganisms adapted to multiextreme environments. Cyanobacteria represent the most well studied Antarctic microorganisms related to the cell biology, abundance, distribution, and symbioses. However, substantial drawbacks remain, e.g., (i) the diversity of Antarctic cyanobacteria has been evaluated without a consensus between bacteriologists and phycologists due to the intricate interplay of morphological records, genomic data and culturing restrictions as well as taxonomic obstacles; (ii) although the main strategy of Antarctic cyanobacteria is biofilms (in particular, microbial mats), detailed knowledge on these symbiotic systems is still fragmentary; (iii) the specificity of the ‘Antarctic cyanobacteria biosphere’ should be better understood in light of unresolved questions related to endemism in prokaryotes, and (iv) the strains of Antarctic cyanobacteria maintained in culture are not numerous and not very diverse. These issues are at the forefront of cyanobacteriology, which is supported by related biosciences and earth sciences.
AB - This review compiles principal data on Antarctic cynobacteria published in recent decades and focuses on the diversity, environmental adaptations, and ecotypes of these microorganisms. Multidisciplinary investigation of Antarctica is important especially in times of global climate change and anthropogenic threats to unaltered ecosystems. Antarctica, which has been disconnected from Gondwana for the last 65 Myr, harbors relict biota mainly including microorganisms adapted to multiextreme environments. Cyanobacteria represent the most well studied Antarctic microorganisms related to the cell biology, abundance, distribution, and symbioses. However, substantial drawbacks remain, e.g., (i) the diversity of Antarctic cyanobacteria has been evaluated without a consensus between bacteriologists and phycologists due to the intricate interplay of morphological records, genomic data and culturing restrictions as well as taxonomic obstacles; (ii) although the main strategy of Antarctic cyanobacteria is biofilms (in particular, microbial mats), detailed knowledge on these symbiotic systems is still fragmentary; (iii) the specificity of the ‘Antarctic cyanobacteria biosphere’ should be better understood in light of unresolved questions related to endemism in prokaryotes, and (iv) the strains of Antarctic cyanobacteria maintained in culture are not numerous and not very diverse. These issues are at the forefront of cyanobacteriology, which is supported by related biosciences and earth sciences.
KW - Biofilm
KW - Cyanoprokaryotes
KW - Endemic bacteria
KW - Microbial mat
KW - Polyphasic taxonomy
KW - Psychrophilic bacteria
KW - MICROBIAL COMMUNITY STRUCTURE
KW - CIERVA POINT
KW - FUNCTIONAL DIVERSITY
KW - MAT COMMUNITIES
KW - MCMURDO DRY VALLEYS
KW - FRESH-WATER
KW - METAGENOMIC ANALYSIS
KW - LAKE UNTERSEE
KW - MORPHOLOGICAL CHARACTERIZATION
KW - ROSS-ISLAND
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85105324340&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/8da1a917-0fe5-370c-b44b-8c2177e33511/
U2 - 10.1007/s10750-021-04588-9
DO - 10.1007/s10750-021-04588-9
M3 - Review article
VL - 848
SP - 2627
EP - 2652
JO - Hydrobiologia
JF - Hydrobiologia
SN - 0018-8158
IS - 11
ER -
ID: 76919691