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Fossil and Recent Biofilms: A Natural History of Life on Earth PDF

485 Pages·2003·18.517 MB·English
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FOSSIL AND RECENT BIOFILMS Fossil and Recent Biofilms A Natural History of Life on Earth Edited by Wolfgang Elisabeth Krumbein ICBM, Carl von Ossietzky University Olgenburg, Germany David Maxwell Paterson Gatty Marine Laboratory, University of St. Andrews, Scotland, u.K. and Georgii Aleksandrovich Zavarzin Institute of Microbiology, Russian Academy of Science, Moscow, Russia SPRINGER-SCIENCE+BUSINESS MEDIA B.V. A c.I.P. Catalogue record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISBN 978-90-481-6412-7 ISBN 978-94-017-0193-8 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-94-017-0193-8 Printed on acid-free paper All Rights Reserved © 2003 Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht Originally published by Kluwer Academic Publishers in 2003 Softcover reprint of the hardcover 1st edition 2003 No part of this work may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the Publisher, with the exception of any material supplied specifically for the purpose of being entered and executed on a computer system, for exclusive use by the purchaser of the work. THIS BOOK IS DEDICATED TO THE MEMORY OF: SadiCARNOT Robert von MAYER Wilhelm OSTWALD Nicolas Leonard Sadi Carnal (June 1, 1796 - August 24, 1832) first considered the quantitative relationship between heat and work. Lord Kelvin of Largs regarded Camot as the founder of thennodynamics. Julius Robert von Mayer (November 25, 1814 - March, 20,1878) was the first to apply thennodynamics to the inanimate and animate world. His statement.. "Und so fangt die Krautdecke der Erde das Licht, die fliichtigste alier Krafte im Fluge ein und verwandelt es in niitzliche chemische Energie" (And thus the blanket of herbs catches light, the most evasive of forces, in flight and transfonns it into useful chemical energy) already indicates the potential of biofi1ms to store huge amounts of sun energy in the sedimentary crust of planets. This energy pump proposed by Robert Mayer (or honey pump of J. Beuys) combines physical and planetary thennodynamics with the thennodynamics of life as later elaborated by W. Ostwald. Wilhelm Ostwald (September 02,1853 - April 04,1932) was Nobel laureate (1909) and is commemorated for his immortal contribution to the understanding of multiple catalytic processes in Nature (Biofilms have been and are the most efficient catalysts between inanimate and animate Earth) TABLE OF CONTENTS Biodata of the Editors .................................................................................. xi Acknowledgements ..................................................................................... xiv Preface J William Costerton and Paul. Stoodley Microbial biofilms: protective niches in ancient and modern geomicrobiology .......................................................................................... xv Chapter 1: Wolfgang E. Krumbein. Ulrike Brehm, Anna A. Gorbushina, Geroge Levit, Katarzyna A. Palinska Biofilm, Biodictyon and Biomat -Biolaminites, Oolites, Stromatolites - Geophysiology, Global Mechanism and Parahistology ................................ . Chapter 2: Thomas R. Neu, Annett Eitner, M Luz Paje Development and architecture of complex environmental biofilms - lotic biofilm systems ..................................................................................... 29 Chapter 3: David M Paterson, Rupert Perkins, Mireille Consalvey, Graham J C. Underwood Ecosystem function, cell micro-cycling and the structure of transient biofilms ....................................................................................................... 47 Chapter 4: John F. Stolz Structure of marine biofilms -Flat Laminated Mats and Modern Marine Stromatolites ................................................................................................ 65 Chapter 5: Michael Kiihl, Tom Fenchel, JozeJKazmierczak Growth, structure and calcification potential of an artificial cyanobacterial mat ...................................................................................... 77 viii Chapter 6 Pamela Reid, C. D. Dupraz, P. T. Visscher, D. Y. Sumner Microbial processes forming marine stromatolites -Microbe-Mineral Interactions with a Three-Billion-Year Rock Record................................ 103 Chapter 7: Lucas J. Stal Nitrogen cycling in marine cyanobacterial mats ........................................ 119 Chapter 8: Georgii A. Zavarzin Diversity of Cyano-Bacterial Mats........ .................................................... 141 Chapter 9: Ulrike Brehm, Wolfgang E. Krumbein, Katarzyna A. Palinska Microbial spheres from microbial mats.......... ........................ .............. ..... 151 Chapter 10: Hartmut Arndt, Kerstin Schmidt-Denter, Brigitte Auer, Markus Weiterer Protozoans and biofilms ............................................................................. 161 Chapter 11: Joachim Scholz, George Levit Bryozoan morphoprocesses ....................................................................... 181 Chapter 12: Gisela Gerdes Biofilms and macroorganisms ...... ................ .................. ........................... 197 Chapter 13: Chantal DeRidder, Robin L. Brigmon "Farming" of microbial mats in the hindgut of echinoids ......................... 217 Chapter 14: Alan W. Decho, Tomohiro Kawaguchi Extracellular polymers (EPS) and calcification within modem marine stromatolites ............................................................................................... 227 Chapter 15: David C. Gillan The Study of a recent Iron-encrusted biofilm in the marine environment. 241 Chapter 16: Stjepko Golubic, Jiirgen Schneider Microbial endoliths as internal biofilms .................................................... 249 ix Chapter 17: Nora Nojjke Epibenthic cyanobacterial communities in the context of sedimentary processes in siliciclastic depositional systems (present and past) .............. 265 Chapter 18: Derek E. G. Briggs The role of biofilms in the fossilization of non-biomineralized tissues ..... 281 Chapter 19: Alain Preat, K. Kolo, B. Marne!, Anna A. Gorbushina, David C. Gillan Fossil and subrecent fungal communities in three calcrete series from the devonian Canadian rocky mountains, Carboniferous of northern France and Cretaceous of central Italy ....................................................... 291 Chapter 20: Maud M Walsh, Frances Westall Archean biofilms preserved in the Swaziland supergroup, South Africa .. 307 Chapter 21: Douglas E. Caldwell Is the feedback between genetic structure and community structure the computational mechanism ofbiofilm evolution? ...................................... 317 Chapter 22: George Levit, Wolfgang E. Krurnbein Is there an adequate terminology ofbiofilms and microbial mats? ........... 333 Chapter 23: Betsey D. Dyer Hidden in plain sight -A macroscopic approach to biofilms and other visible manifestations of bacteria in the teaching of field microbiology ... 343 Chapter 24: Nickolai V Shadrin Is it possible to quantitatively assess the role of algobacterial films in a water body? ................................................................................................ 353 Chapter 25: Eric P. Verrecchia, Corinne Loisy, Olivier Braissan!, Anna A. Gorbushina The role of fungal biofilm and networks in the terrestrial calcium carbonate cycle .......................................................................................... 363 x Chapter 26: Karsten Pedersen Past and present biofilm formation in deep fennoscandian shield groundwater............................................................................................... 371 Chapter 27: Jesus M Valero, J. lfiaki AlavaAlava Melanin and chromatic changes in black crusts of sandstone monuments 381 Chapter 28: Karsten Rodenacker, Bettina Hausner, Anna A. Gorbushina Quantification and spatial relationship of microorganisms in sub-aquatic and sub-aerial biofilms ............................................................................... 387 Chapter 29: Joseph Seckbach Life on the edge and beyond...................................................................... 401 Chapter 30: Yuri M Svirezhev, Arthur Block, Werner von Bloh "Active planetary cover" concept and long-term evolution of planetary climate ........................................................................................................ 415 Chapter 31: Jan Toporski, Andrew Steele, David S. McKay, Frances Westall Bacterial biofilms in astrobiology: the Importance oflife detection ......... 429 Chapter 32: Frances Westall, Maud M Walsh, Jan Toporski, Andrew Steele Fossil biofilms and the search for life on Mars .......................................... 447 Chapter 33: A. Yu. Rozanov, E. Zhegallo, G. T Ushatinskaya Some aspects of studying offossil mats and biofilms ............................... 467 Index .......................................................................................................... 473 Professor Wolfgang Elisabeth Krumbein is an interdisciplinary scientist (and artist) combining many fields of expertise. He has published as a sedimentologist, microbiologist, molecular ecologist, ecologist, marine scientist, palaeontologist philosopher and conservation scientist in more than 125 different scientific periodicals and more than 15 books. He is the founder of ICBM Oldenburg, a recipient of several honorarium doctorates and international prizes. His main interests, however, were always to promote young scientists in many different fields. He has been involved in more than 75 doctorate promotions worldwide. He feels his major scientific obligation is the promotion of the fusion of Planetary and Life Sciences beneath, above and beyond physical, chemical, and biological borders of planet Earth. He is a leading figure in geomicrobiology and geophysiology as emerging branches of science as well as in Exobiology including the NASA sponsored "Planetary Biology and Microbial Ecology (PBME)" courses. One of his major contributions, however, was understanding the impact of microbes on the conservation and restoration of cultural heritage. The photo depicts his acceptance speech of the Dr. honoris causa of the University of Gdansk in the Artushof, Gdansk, from where his ancestors traded beer, science, wheat and wood with all Europe and further afield.

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