• Title of article

    Geomicrobial transformation of manganese in Gorda Ridge event plumes

  • Author/Authors

    Cowen، نويسنده , , James P. and Bertram، نويسنده , , Miriam A. and Baker، نويسنده , , Edward T. and Feely، نويسنده , , Richard A. and Massoth، نويسنده , , Gary J. and Summit، نويسنده , , Melanie، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
  • Pages
    25
  • From page
    2713
  • To page
    2737
  • Abstract
    Event plumes form as episodic discharges of large volumes of hydrothermal solutions in response to magmatic diking/eruptive events. In consequence, event plumes represent the sudden injection of exploitable reduced chemical substrates, as well as inhibitory constituents, and likely induce successional changes in the microbial community structure and activity within event plume waters. In response to a major seismic event detected beginning 28 February 1996 at the northern Gorda Ridge, a series of three rapid response and follow-up cruises (GREAT 1, 2 and 3) were mounted over a period of three months. This report focuses on time-series measurements of manganese geomicrobial parameters in the two event plumes found in association with this seismic event. ng transmission electron microscopy, elemental microanalysis, and radioisotope (54Mn) uptake experiments were employed on samples collected from vertical and tow-yo casts from the three cruises. Numbers of bacteria and ratios of metal precipitating capsuled bacteria to total bacteria were greatest in the youngest (days old) plume, EP96A, found during GREAT 1; however, when normalized to the hydrothermal temperature anomaly, the greatest values were found in a second event plume, EP96B, discovered during GREAT 2 (up to 1 month old). Early capsule bacteria and particulate Mn distributions may have been influenced by entrainment of resuspended sediment, while those of the oldest (2–3 months) plume sample may have been subjected to preferential aggregation and particle settling.
  • Journal title
    Deep-sea research part II: Topical Studies in oceanography
  • Serial Year
    1998
  • Journal title
    Deep-sea research part II: Topical Studies in oceanography
  • Record number

    2311515