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Dive into the research topics where Susanna Theroux is active.

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Featured researches published by Susanna Theroux.


The ISME Journal | 2011

Microbial community structure across the tree of life in the extreme Río Tinto.

Linda A. Amaral-Zettler; Erik R. Zettler; Susanna Theroux; Carmen Palacios; Angeles Aguilera; Ricardo Amils

Understanding biotic versus abiotic forces that shape community structure is a fundamental aim of microbial ecology. The acidic and heavy metal extreme Río Tinto (RT) in southwestern Spain provides a rare opportunity to conduct an ecosystem-wide biodiversity inventory at the level of all three domains of life, because diversity there is low and almost exclusively microbial. Despite improvements in high-throughput DNA sequencing, environmental biodiversity studies that use molecular metrics and consider entire ecosystems are rare. These studies can be prohibitively expensive if domains are considered separately, and differences in copy number of eukaryotic ribosomal RNA genes can bias estimates of relative abundances of phylotypes recovered. In this study we have overcome these barriers (1) by targeting all three domains in a single polymerase chain reaction amplification and (2) by using a replicated sampling design that allows for incidence-based methods to extract measures of richness and carry out downstream analyses that address community structuring effects. Our work showed that combined bacterial and archaeal richness is an order of magnitude higher than eukaryotic richness. We also found that eukaryotic richness was highest at the most extreme sites, whereas combined bacterial and archaeal richness was highest at less extreme sites. Quantitative community phylogenetics showed abiotic forces to be primarily responsible for shaping the RT community structure. Canonical correspondence analysis revealed co-occurrence of obligate symbionts and their putative hosts that may contribute to biotic forces shaping community structure and may further provide a possible mechanism for persistence of certain low-abundance bacteria encountered in the RT.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2012

Comparative molecular microbial ecology of the spring haptophyte bloom in a greenland arctic oligosaline lake.

Susanna Theroux; Yongsong Huang; Linda A. Amaral-Zettler

The Arctic is highly sensitive to increasing global temperatures and is projected to experience dramatic ecological shifts in the next few decades. Oligosaline lakes are common in arctic regions where evaporation surpasses precipitation, however these extreme microbial communities are poorly characterized. Many oligosaline lakes, in contrast to freshwater ones, experience annual blooms of haptophyte algae that generate valuable alkenone biomarker records that can be used for paleoclimate reconstruction. These haptophyte algae are globally important, and globally distributed, aquatic phototrophs yet their presence in microbial molecular surveys is scarce. To target haptophytes in a molecular survey, we compared microbial community structure during two haptophyte bloom events in an arctic oligosaline lake, Lake BrayaSø in southwestern Greenland, using high-throughput pyrotag sequencing. Our comparison of two annual bloom events yielded surprisingly low taxon overlap, only 13% for bacterial and 26% for eukaryotic communities, which indicates significant annual variation in the underlying microbial populations. Both the bacterial and eukaryotic communities strongly resembled high-altitude and high latitude freshwater environments. In spite of high alkenone concentrations in the water column, and corresponding high haptophyte rRNA gene copy numbers, haptophyte pyrotag sequences were not the most abundant eukaryotic tag, suggesting that sequencing biases obscured relative abundance data. With over 170 haptophyte tag sequences, we observed only one haptophyte algal Operational Taxonomic Unit, a prerequisite for accurate paleoclimate reconstruction from the lake sediments. Our study is the first to examine microbial diversity in a Greenland lake using next generation sequencing and the first to target an extreme haptophyte bloom event. Our results provide a context for future explorations of aquatic ecology in the warming arctic.


Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2010

Phylogenetic diversity and evolutionary relatedness of alkenone-producing haptophyte algae in lakes: Implications for continental paleotemperature reconstructions

Susanna Theroux; William J. D'Andrea; Jaime Toney; Linda A. Amaral-Zettler; Yongsong Huang


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2012

Culturing of the first 37:4 predominant lacustrine haptophyte: geochemical, biochemical, and genetic implications

Jaime Toney; Susanna Theroux; Robert A. Andersen; Annette W. Coleman; Linda A. Amaral-Zettler; Yongsong Huang


Organic Geochemistry | 2013

Production and temperature sensitivity of long chain alkenones in the cultured haptophyte Pseudoisochrysis paradoxa

Susanna Theroux; Jaime Toney; Linda A. Amaral-Zettler; Yongsong Huang


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2016

Temperature calibration and phylogenetically distinct distributions for freshwater alkenones: Evidence from northern Alaskan lakes

William M. Longo; Susanna Theroux; Anne E. Giblin; Yinsui Zheng; James T. Dillon; Yongsong Huang


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2016

Does phylogeny control U37K-temperature sensitivity? Implications for lacustrine alkenone paleothermometry

William J. D’Andrea; Susanna Theroux; Raymond S. Bradley; Xiaohui Huang


Archive | 2010

Temperature calibration of lacustrine alkenones using in-situ sampling and growth cultures

Yan Huang; Jaime Toney; Richard Andersen; Sherilyn C. Fritz; Paul A. Baker; Eric C. Grimm; Susanna Theroux; Linda Amaral Zettler; P. Nyren


Archive | 2009

Haptophyte alga from Greenland lakes offers unprecedented opportunity to decipher alkenone biosynthetic pathways and functionality

Susanna Theroux; Linda A. Amaral-Zettler; Y. P. Huang


Archive | 2008

Environmental and Climatic Control on the Occurrence and Abundance of Long Chain Alkenones in Lakes of the Interior United States

Jaime Toney; Sherilyn C. Fritz; Paul A. Baker; Eric C. Grimm; P. Nyren; Susanna Theroux; Y. P. Huang

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P. Nyren

North Dakota State University

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Sherilyn C. Fritz

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

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Anne E. Giblin

Marine Biological Laboratory

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