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The microbial community at laguna Figueroa,Baja California Mexico: From miles to microns
Authors:John F Stolz
Institution:(1) Department of Biology, Boston University, 2 Cummington Street, 02215 Boston, MA, USA;(2) Present address: Jet Propulsion Laboratory 125-112, California Institute of Technology 4800 Oak Grove Dr., 91109 Pasadena, CA
Abstract:Laguna Figueroa is a lagoonal complex on the Pacific coast of the Baja California penisula 200 km south of the Mexican-United States border. The hypersaline lagoon is 16 km long and 2–3 km wide with a salt marsh and evaporite flat and is separated from the ocean by a barrier dune and beach. At the salt marsh-evaporite flat interface a stratified microbial community dominated byMicrocoleus chthonoplastes is depositing laminated sediments. Similar stratiform deposits with associated microbial mat communities have been found in cherts of the Fig Tree Group, South Africa which are 3.4 GE in age.Heavy rains in the winters of 1978–1979 and 1979–1980 flooded the evaporite flat with 1–3 meters of meteoric water and buried the laminated sediment under 5–10 cm of siliciclastic and clay sediment. These flooding events had a dramatic effect on the composition of the mat community. TheMicrocoleus dominated community, with species ofChloroflexus sp. and anEctothiorhodospira-like filamentous purple phototroph, disappeared leaving a community dominated by the purple phototrophsChromatium sp. andThiocapsa sp. Recolonization of the surface by species of the cyanobacteriaOscillatoria sp. andSpirulina sp. preceded the return of theMicrocoleus community.Field conditions were monitored by ground based observations and supplemented with LandSat and Skylab imagery. The microbial community was studied with light microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The change in dominating microbial species was correlated with the episodes of flooding.
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