Sedimentary Biosignatures of Social Organization in Cone-Forming Filamentous Bacteria
Abstract
Conical mats consisting of centimeter-scale steep-sided cones growing above flat basal films form some of the most distinctive fossil microbial communities in the geologic record. Cones have been hypothesized to form by the initially random motion of filamentous bacteria into small tangled clumps followed by the phototactic motion of the same bacteria up resulting slopes. More recent models of cone development suggest that they form in response to growth in stagnant fluids where diffusion limits exchange of nutrients and wastes with the environment. Determining the biological and environmental factors that promote cone formation will be important for interpreting the geological record of fossil mats and stromatolites, on Earth and potentially on Mars. Here we report the results of new experiments demonstrating complex social organization of cone-forming communities and a novel biosignature of the growth of such communities on sandy sediments, as well as detection of that biosignature in 3.2 Ga fossil mats of the Moodies Group (Barberton greenstone belt, South Africa). In order to investigate the processes involved in cone formation, we grew cultures of a filamentous cyanobacterium originally isolated from tufted cones in Yellowstone National Park, Montana, U.S.A. (Leptolyngbya sp. Y-WT-2000 Cl 1). During early mat development, filaments coat sand grain surfaces and aggregate into ~100-μm-long tufts, or mutually aligned bundles of filaments. Tufts are highly motile, bridging sand grains and merging to form larger tufts. After 10-14 days of growth, tufts aggregate during the early morning into centers composed of many tufts that wave vertically and along the sand surface. Centers move across the sediment surface during the middle of the day and merge along bridging tufts. These bridges transmit force to the underlying sediment and are capable of rolling sand grains. At this stage, mats are composed of small mobile centers that disperse along streams of co-moving bacteria during the evening. This diel cycle, together with preferential movement of relatively coarse sand grains that protrude above surrounding finer grains, efficiently sorts the underlying sediment such that mature mats are composed of large stabilized centers resting on small piles of coarser sand. Because these cone-forming mats sort sand grains by applying a shear stress at the sediment surface, growth of similar bacteria on sand surfaces should result in the preferential aggregation of equant coarse light mineral grains into cones and the formation of finer heavy mineral lags in interconical spaces. We observe these patterns of sorting by grain size, aspect ratio, and density around cones in Moodies Group fossil mats. These patterns could not have been produced by hydraulic sorting alone, and instead suggest the following conclusions. Cone-constructing Moodies microorganisms were 1) filamentous, 2) moved by gliding motility, and 3) moved as socially organized groups. In addition, it seems probable that these organisms 4) periodically reversed the direction of their movement on a time scale much more rapid than the time between deposition of sand beds, possibly as part of a diel cycle.
- Publication:
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AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2013
- Bibcode:
- 2013AGUFM.P51F1785T
- Keywords:
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- 5200 PLANETARY SCIENCES: ASTROBIOLOGY;
- 0406 BIOGEOSCIENCES Astrobiology and extraterrestrial materials;
- 0424 BIOGEOSCIENCES Biosignatures and proxies;
- 0448 BIOGEOSCIENCES Geomicrobiology