Microbial Diversity in an Arid, Naturally Saline Environment
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111647Metadatos
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2018-12-28Referencia bibliográfica
Bachran, M., Kluge, S., Lopez-Fernandez, M., & Cherkouk, A. (2019). Microbial diversity in an arid, naturally saline environment. Microbial ecology, 78(2), 494-505.
Resumen
The Arava Valley in is a rock desert within the Great African Rift valley. Soil from this area is covered with a salt crust. Here, we
report microbial diversity from arid, naturally saline samples collected near Ein Yahav from the Arava Valley by cultureindependent
as well as culture-dependent analysis. High-throughput sequencing of the hypervariable region V4 of the 16S
rRNA gene revealed that the microbial community consists of halophiles from the domain Bacteria as well as Archaea.
Bacterial diversity was mainly represented by the genus Salinimicrobium of the order Flavobacteriales within the phylum
Bacteroidetes, from the gammaproteobacterial orders Alteromonadales and Oceanospirillales as well as representatives from
the order Bacillales of the phylum Firmicutes. Archaeal diversity was dominated by euryarchaeal Halobacteria from the orders
Halobacteriales, Haloferacales, and Natrialbales. But more than 40% of the sequences affiliated with Archaea were assigned to
unknown or unclassified archaea. Even if taxonomic resolution of the 16S rRNAgeneV4 region for Archaea is limited, this study
indicates the need of further and more detailed studies of Archaea. By using culture-dependent analysis, bacteria of the order
Bacillales as well as archaea from all three halobacterial orders Halobacteriales, Haloferacales, and Natrialbales including
potentially novel species from the genera Halorubrum and Haloparvum were isolated.





