Rishi R. Adhikari
University of Bremen
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Featured researches published by Rishi R. Adhikari.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2012
Jens Kallmeyer; Robert A. Pockalny; Rishi R. Adhikari; David C. Smith; Steven D'Hondt
The global geographic distribution of subseafloor sedimentary microbes and the cause(s) of that distribution are largely unexplored. Here, we show that total microbial cell abundance in subseafloor sediment varies between sites by ca. five orders of magnitude. This variation is strongly correlated with mean sedimentation rate and distance from land. Based on these correlations, we estimate global subseafloor sedimentary microbial abundance to be 2.9⋅1029 cells [corresponding to 4.1 petagram (Pg) C and ∼0.6% of Earth’s total living biomass]. This estimate of subseafloor sedimentary microbial abundance is roughly equal to previous estimates of total microbial abundance in seawater and total microbial abundance in soil. It is much lower than previous estimates of subseafloor sedimentary microbial abundance. In consequence, we estimate Earth’s total number of microbes and total living biomass to be, respectively, 50–78% and 10–45% lower than previous estimates.
Science | 2012
Hans Røy; Jens Kallmeyer; Rishi R. Adhikari; Robert A. Pockalny; Bo Barker Jørgensen; Steven D’Hondt
Deep Breathing Living microbes have been discovered many meters into marine sediments. On a cruise in the North Pacific Gyre, Røy et al. (p. 922) discovered that oxygen occurred for tens of meters into the sediment. The bacteria living in these sediments were respiring the oxygen but at a slower rate than the supply of organic material dropping out of the water column, allowing these ancient deep marine sediments to remain oxygenated. Modeling showed that the rate of respiration of specific carbon decreased as a function of sediment depth, that is, its age. Thus aerobic metabolism can persist in deep marine sediments. Microbes in Pacific sediments grow very, very slowly. Microbial communities can subsist at depth in marine sediments without fresh supply of organic matter for millions of years. At threshold sedimentation rates of 1 millimeter per 1000 years, the low rates of microbial community metabolism in the North Pacific Gyre allow sediments to remain oxygenated tens of meters below the sea floor. We found that the oxygen respiration rates dropped from 10 micromoles of O2 liter−1 year−1 near the sediment-water interface to 0.001 micromoles of O2 liter−1 year−1 at 30-meter depth within 86 million-year-old sediment. The cell-specific respiration rate decreased with depth but stabilized at around 10−3 femtomoles of O2 cell−1 day−1 10 meters below the seafloor. This result indicated that the community size is controlled by the rate of carbon oxidation and thereby by the low available energy flux.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016
Clemens Glombitza; Rishi R. Adhikari; Natascha Riedinger; William P. Gilhooly; Kai-Uwe Hinrichs; Fumio Inagaki
Sulfate reduction is the predominant anaerobic microbial process of organic matter mineralization in marine sediments, with recent studies revealing that sulfate reduction not only occurs in sulfate-rich sediments, but even extends to deeper, methanogenic sediments at very low background concentrations of sulfate. Using samples retrieved off the Shimokita Peninsula, Japan, during the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Expedition 337, we measured potential sulfate reduction rates by slurry incubations with 35S-labeled sulfate in deep methanogenic sediments between 1276.75 and 2456.75 meters below the seafloor. Potential sulfate reduction rates were generally extremely low (mostly below 0.1 pmol cm−3 d−1) but showed elevated values (up to 1.8 pmol cm−3 d−1) in a coal-bearing interval (Unit III). A measured increase in hydrogenase activity in the coal-bearing horizons coincided with this local increase in potential sulfate reduction rates. This paired enzymatic response suggests that hydrogen is a potentially important electron donor for sulfate reduction in the deep coalbed biosphere. By contrast, no stimulation of sulfate reduction rates was observed in treatments where methane was added as an electron donor. In the deep coalbeds, small amounts of sulfate might be provided by a cryptic sulfur cycle. The isotopically very heavy pyrites (δ34S = +43‰) found in this horizon is consistent with its formation via microbial sulfate reduction that has been continuously utilizing a small, increasingly 34S-enriched sulfate reservoir over geologic time scales. Although our results do not represent in-situ activity, and the sulfate reducers might only have persisted in a dormant, spore-like state, our findings show that organisms capable of sulfate reduction have survived in deep methanogenic sediments over more than 20 Ma. This highlights the ability of sulfate-reducers to persist over geological timespans even in sulfate-depleted environments. Our study moreover represents the deepest evidence of a potential for sulfate reduction in marine sediments to date.
Frontiers in Microbiology | 2016
Rishi R. Adhikari; Clemens Glombitza; Julia C. Nickel; Chloe H Anderson; Ann G. Dunlea; Arthur J. Spivack; Richard W. Murray; Steven D'Hondt; Jens Kallmeyer
Subsurface microbial communities undertake many terminal electron-accepting processes, often simultaneously. Using a tritium-based assay, we measured the potential hydrogen oxidation catalyzed by hydrogenase enzymes in several subsurface sedimentary environments (Lake Van, Barents Sea, Equatorial Pacific, and Gulf of Mexico) with different predominant electron-acceptors. Hydrogenases constitute a diverse family of enzymes expressed by microorganisms that utilize molecular hydrogen as a metabolic substrate, product, or intermediate. The assay reveals the potential for utilizing molecular hydrogen and allows qualitative detection of microbial activity irrespective of the predominant electron-accepting process. Because the method only requires samples frozen immediately after recovery, the assay can be used for identifying microbial activity in subsurface ecosystems without the need to preserve live material. We measured potential hydrogen oxidation rates in all samples from multiple depths at several sites that collectively span a wide range of environmental conditions and biogeochemical zones. Potential activity normalized to total cell abundance ranges over five orders of magnitude and varies, dependent upon the predominant terminal electron acceptor. Lowest per-cell potential rates characterize the zone of nitrate reduction and highest per-cell potential rates occur in the methanogenic zone. Possible reasons for this relationship to predominant electron acceptor include (i) increasing importance of fermentation in successively deeper biogeochemical zones and (ii) adaptation of H2ases to successively higher concentrations of H2 in successively deeper zones.
Science Advances | 2018
Akira Ijiri; Fumio Inagaki; Yusuke Kubo; Rishi R. Adhikari; Shohei Hattori; Tatsuhiko Hoshino; Hiroyuki Imachi; Shinsuke Kawagucci; Yuki Morono; Yoko Ohtomo; Shuhei Ono; Sanae Sakai; Ken Takai; Tomohiro Toki; David T. Wang; Marcos Yukio Yoshinaga; Gail Lee Arnold; Juichiro Ashi; David H. Case; Tomas Feseker; Kai-Uwe Hinrichs; Yojiro Ikegawa; Minoru Ikehara; Jens Kallmeyer; Hidenori Kumagai; Mark A. Lever; Sumito Morita; Ko-ichi Nakamura; Yuki Nakamura; Manabu Nishizawa
Scientific drilling at a submarine mud volcano shows that geofluid migration stimulates methanogenesis in the deep biosphere. Microbial life inhabiting subseafloor sediments plays an important role in Earth’s carbon cycle. However, the impact of geodynamic processes on the distributions and carbon-cycling activities of subseafloor life remains poorly constrained. We explore a submarine mud volcano of the Nankai accretionary complex by drilling down to 200 m below the summit. Stable isotopic compositions of water and carbon compounds, including clumped methane isotopologues, suggest that ~90% of methane is microbially produced at 16° to 30°C and 300 to 900 m below seafloor, corresponding to the basin bottom, where fluids in the accretionary prism are supplied via megasplay faults. Radiotracer experiments showed that relatively small microbial populations in deep mud volcano sediments (102 to 103 cells cm−3) include highly active hydrogenotrophic methanogens and acetogens. Our findings indicate that subduction-associated fluid migration has stimulated microbial activity in the mud reservoir and that mud volcanoes may contribute more substantially to the methane budget than previously estimated.
Chemie Der Erde-geochemistry | 2010
Rishi R. Adhikari; Jens Kallmeyer
Archive | 2016
Christian France-Lanord; V. Spiess; Adam Klaus; Rishi R. Adhikari; Swostik K. Adhikari; J.-J. Bahk; A.T. Baxter; Jarrett Cruz; Supriyo Kumar Das; Petra Simonne Dekens; Wania Duleba; Lyndsey Fox; Albert Galy; Valier Galy; J. Ge; James D. Gleason; Babu R. Gyawali; Pascale Huyghe; G. Jia; Hendrik Lantzsch; M.C. Manoj; Y. Martos Martin; Laure Meynadier; Yani Najman; Arata Nakajima; Camilo Ponton; Brendan T. Reilly; Kimberly G. Rogers; Jairo F. Savian; Tilmann Schwenk
Archive | 2016
Christian France-Lanord; V. Spiess; Adam Klaus; Rishi R. Adhikari; Swostik K. Adhikari; J.-J. Bahk; A.T. Baxter; Jarrett Cruz; Supriyo Kumar Das; Petra Simonne Dekens; Wania Duleba; Lyndsey Fox; Albert Galy; Valier Galy; J. Ge; James D. Gleason; Babu R. Gyawali; Pascale Huyghe; G. Jia; Hendrik Lantzsch; M.C. Manoj; Y. Martos Martin; Laure Meynadier; Yani Najman; Arata Nakajima; Camilo Ponton; Brendan T. Reilly; Kimberly G. Rogers; Jairo F. Savian; Tilmann Schwenk
Archive | 2009
Jens Kallmeyer; Robert A. Pockalny; Steven D'Hondt; Rishi R. Adhikari
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2018
Thomas W. Evans; Martin Könneke; Julius S. Lipp; Rishi R. Adhikari; Heidi Taubner; Marcus Elvert; Kai-Uwe Hinrichs