Environmental Gradients and Conservation Status Determine the Structure and Carbon‐Related Metabolic Potential of the Prokaryotic Communities of Mediterranean Inland Saline Shallow Lakes

ABSTRACT Mediterranean inland saline lakes may play an important role in the carbon cycle due to the metabolic capacities of their prokaryotic communities. However, these lakes are not homogeneous and have different environmental characteristics. In this work, the structure and both actual activity...

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Main Authors: Javier Miralles‐Lorenzo, Antonio Picazo, Carlos Rochera, Daniel Morant, Emilio O. Casamayor, Mateu Menéndez‐Serra, Antonio Camacho
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-05-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.71286
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Summary:ABSTRACT Mediterranean inland saline lakes may play an important role in the carbon cycle due to the metabolic capacities of their prokaryotic communities. However, these lakes are not homogeneous and have different environmental characteristics. In this work, the structure and both actual activity and predicted function of the prokaryotic communities inhabiting water and sediments of 15 Mediterranean inland saline shallow lakes have been studied. These lakes are grouped in categories according to their salinity, conservation statuses, and alterations, which determine the structuration of the prokaryotic communities and their carbon‐related metabolisms. Each salinity category and conservation status showed characteristic prokaryotic taxa. The relative abundance of methanogenic archaea tended to increase along the salinity gradient, but this did not result in increased methane emissions. The relationship between metabolic rates and the predicted abundance of their marker genes depended on the type of metabolism. Archaea played a relevant role in the organization of interactions between community members and were markers of good conservation status. Water communities were shaped by the salinity gradient, conservation status, and seasonality, while sediment communities were mostly determined by the salinity gradient. This work highlights the importance of combining molecular studies with in situ metabolic measurements to better understand carbon fluxes in inland saline aquatic ecosystems.
ISSN:2045-7758