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Dive into the research topics where Erin L. Becker is active.

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Featured researches published by Erin L. Becker.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012

Evidence for the role of endosymbionts in regional-scale habitat partitioning by hydrothermal vent symbioses

Roxanne A. Beinart; Jon G. Sanders; Baptiste Faure; Sean P. Sylva; Raymond W. Lee; Erin L. Becker; Amy Gartman; George W. Luther; Jeffrey S. Seewald; Charles R. Fisher; Peter R. Girguis

Deep-sea hydrothermal vents are populated by dense communities of animals that form symbiotic associations with chemolithoautotrophic bacteria. To date, our understanding of which factors govern the distribution of host/symbiont associations (or holobionts) in nature is limited, although host physiology often is invoked. In general, the role that symbionts play in habitat utilization by vent holobionts has not been thoroughly addressed. Here we present evidence for symbiont-influenced, regional-scale niche partitioning among symbiotic gastropods (genus Alviniconcha) in the Lau Basin. We extensively surveyed Alviniconcha holobionts from four vent fields using quantitative molecular approaches, coupled to characterization of high-temperature and diffuse vent-fluid composition using gastight samplers and in situ electrochemical analyses, respectively. Phylogenetic analyses exposed cryptic host and symbiont diversity, revealing three distinct host types and three different symbiont phylotypes (one ε-proteobacteria and two γ-proteobacteria) that formed specific associations with one another. Strikingly, we observed that holobionts with ε-proteobacterial symbionts were dominant at the northern fields, whereas holobionts with γ-proteobacterial symbionts were dominant in the southern fields. This pattern of distribution corresponds to differences in the vent geochemistry that result from deep subsurface geological and geothermal processes. We posit that the symbionts, likely through differences in chemolithoautotrophic metabolism, influence niche utilization among these holobionts. The data presented here represent evidence linking symbiont type to habitat partitioning among the chemosynthetic symbioses at hydrothermal vents and illustrate the coupling between subsurface geothermal processes and niche availability.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2007

Alvin Explores the Deep Northern Gulf of Mexico Slope

Harry H. Roberts; Robert S. Carney; Mathew Kupchik; Charles R. Fisher; Kim Nelson; Erin L. Becker; Liz Goehring; Stephanie Lessard-Pilon; Guy Telesnicki; Bernie B. Bernard; James M. Brooks; Monika Bright; Erik E. Cordes; Stéphane Hourdez; Jesse Hunt; William Shedd; Gregory S. Boland; Samantha B. Joye; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Meaghan Bernier; Marshall W. Bowles; Ian R. MacDonald; Helge Niemann; Cindy Petersen; Cheryl L. Morrison; Jeremy Potter

Many of the worlds productive deepwater hydrocarbon basins experience significant and ongoing vertical migration of fluids and gases to the modern seafloor. These products, which are composed of hydrocarbon gases, crude oil, formation fluids, and fluidized sediment, dramatically change the geologic character of the ocean floor, and they create sites where chemosynthetic communities supported by sulfide and hydrocarbons flourish. Unique fauna inhabit these sites, and the chemosynthetic primary production results in communities with biomass much greater than that of the surrounding seafloor.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Using Stable Isotope Compositions of Animal Tissues to Infer Trophic Interactions in Gulf of Mexico Lower Slope Seep Communities

Erin L. Becker; Erik E. Cordes; Stephen A. Macko; Raymond W. Lee; Charles R. Fisher

We analyzed the tissue carbon, nitrogen, and sulfur stable isotope contents of macrofaunal communities associated with vestimentiferan tubeworms and bathymodiolin mussels from the Gulf of Mexico lower continental slope (970-2800 m). Shrimp in the genus Alvinocaris associated with vestimentiferans from shallow (530 m) and deep (1400-2800 m) sites were used to test the hypothesis that seep animals derive a greater proportion of their nutrition from seeps (i.e. a lower proportion from the surface) at greater depths. To account for spatial variability in the inorganic source pool, we used the differences between the mean tissue δ13C and δ15N of the shrimp in each collection and the mean δ 13C and δ15N values of the vestimentiferans from the same collection, since vestimentiferans are functionally autotrophic and serve as a baseline for environmental isotopic variation. There was a significant negative relationship between this difference and depth for both δ13C and δ15N (p=0.02 and 0.007, respectively), which supports the hypothesis of higher dependence on seep nutrition with depth. The small polychaete worm Protomystides sp. was hypothesized to be a blood parasite of the vestimentiferan Escarpialaminata . There was a highly significant linear relationship between the δ13C values of Protomystides sp. and the E . laminata individuals to which they were attached across all collections (p < 0.001) and within a single collection (p = 0.01), although this relationship was not significant for δ15N and δ34S. We made several other qualitative inferences with respect to the feeding biology of the taxa occurring in these lower slope seeps, some of which have not been described prior to this study.


Deep-sea Research Part I-oceanographic Research Papers | 2008

Coral communities of the deep Gulf of Mexico

Erik E. Cordes; Michael P. McGinley; Elizabeth L. Podowski; Erin L. Becker; Stephanie Lessard-Pilon; Stephen T. Viada; Charles R. Fisher


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010

Influence of foundation species, depth, and location on diversity and community composition at Gulf of Mexico lower-slope cold seeps

Erik E. Cordes; Erin L. Becker; Stéphane Hourdez; Charles R. Fisher


Deep-sea Research Part I-oceanographic Research Papers | 2009

Importance of seep primary production to Lophelia pertusa and associated fauna in the Gulf of Mexico

Erin L. Becker; Erik E. Cordes; Stephen A. Macko; Charles R. Fisher


Electroanalysis | 2008

Voltammetric (Micro)Electrodes for the In Situ Study of Fe2+ Oxidation Kinetics in Hot Springs and S2O Production at Hydrothermal Vents

Katherine M. Mullaugh; George W. Luther; Shufen Ma; Tommy S. Moore; Mustafa Yücel; Erin L. Becker; Elizabeth L. Podowski; Charles R. Fisher; Robert E. Trouwborst; Beverly K. Pierson


Aquatic Geochemistry | 2011

Sulfide Oxidation across Diffuse Flow Zones of Hydrothermal Vents

Amy Gartman; Mustafa Yücel; Andrew S. Madison; David W. Chu; Shufen Ma; Christopher P. Janzen; Erin L. Becker; Roxanne A. Beinart; Peter R. Girguis; George W. Luther


Deep-sea Research Part Ii-topical Studies in Oceanography | 2010

Stable carbon and nitrogen isotope compositions of hydrocarbon-seep bivalves on the Gulf of Mexico lower continental slope

Erin L. Becker; Raymond W. Lee; Stephen A. Macko; Baptiste Faure; Charles R. Fisher


Oceanography | 2012

Links from Mantle to Microbe at the Lau Integrated Study Site: Insights from a Back-Arc Spreading Center

Margaret K. Tivey; Erin L. Becker; Roxanne A. Beinart; Charles R. Fisher; Peter R. Girguis; Charles H. Langmuir; Peter J. Michael; Anna-Louise Reysenbach

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Charles R. Fisher

Pennsylvania State University

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Raymond W. Lee

Washington State University

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Elizabeth L. Podowski

Pennsylvania State University

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Stéphane Hourdez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Amy Gartman

University of Delaware

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