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Research article2017Peer reviewedOpen access

Living microorganisms change the information (Shannon) content of a geophysical system

Tang, Fiona H. M.; Maggi, Federico

Abstract

The detection of microbial colonization in geophysical systems is becoming of interest in various disciplines of Earth and planetary sciences, including microbial ecology, biogeochemistry, geomicrobiology, and astrobiology. Microorganisms are often observed to colonize mineral surfaces, modify the reactivity of minerals either through the attachment of their own biomass or the glueing of mineral particles with their mucilaginous metabolites, and alter both the physical and chemical components of a geophysical system. Here, we hypothesise that microorganisms engineer their habitat, causing a substantial change to the information content embedded in geophysical measures (e.g., particle size and space-filling capacity). After proving this hypothesis, we introduce and test a systematic method that exploits this change in information content to detect microbial colonization in geophysical systems. Effectiveness and robustness of this method are tested using a mineral sediment suspension as a model geophysical system; tests are carried out against 105 experiments conducted with different suspension types (i.e., pure mineral and microbially-colonized) subject to different abiotic conditions, including various nutrient and mineral concentrations, and different background entropy production rates. Results reveal that this method can systematically detect microbial colonization with less than 10% error in geophysical systems with low-entropy background production rate.

Published in

Scientific Reports
2017, Volume: 7, article number: 3320
Publisher: NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP

    UKÄ Subject classification

    Microbiology
    Geophysics

    Publication identifier

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-03479-1

    Permanent link to this page (URI)

    https://res.slu.se/id/publ/111702