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Dive into the research topics where Vladimir A. Samarkin is active.

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Featured researches published by Vladimir A. Samarkin.


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

Microbial life at −13 °C in the brine of an ice-sealed Antarctic lake

Alison E. Murray; Fabien Kenig; Christian H. Fritsen; Christopher P. McKay; Kaelin M. Cawley; Ross Edwards; Emanuele Kuhn; Diane M. McKnight; Nathaniel E. Ostrom; Vivian Peng; Adrian Ponce; John C. Priscu; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Ashley T. Townsend; Protima Wagh; Seth A. Young; Pung To Yung; Peter T. Doran

The permanent ice cover of Lake Vida (Antarctica) encapsulates an extreme cryogenic brine ecosystem (−13 °C; salinity, 200). This aphotic ecosystem is anoxic and consists of a slightly acidic (pH 6.2) sodium chloride-dominated brine. Expeditions in 2005 and 2010 were conducted to investigate the biogeochemistry of Lake Vida’s brine system. A phylogenetically diverse and metabolically active Bacteria dominated microbial assemblage was observed in the brine. These bacteria live under very high levels of reduced metals, ammonia, molecular hydrogen (H2), and dissolved organic carbon, as well as high concentrations of oxidized species of nitrogen (i.e., supersaturated nitrous oxide and ∼1 mmol⋅L−1 nitrate) and sulfur (as sulfate). The existence of this system, with active biota, and a suite of reduced as well as oxidized compounds, is unusual given the millennial scale of its isolation from external sources of energy. The geochemistry of the brine suggests that abiotic brine-rock reactions may occur in this system and that the rich sources of dissolved electron acceptors prevent sulfate reduction and methanogenesis from being energetically favorable. The discovery of this ecosystem and the in situ biotic and abiotic processes occurring at low temperature provides a tractable system to study habitability of isolated terrestrial cryoenvironments (e.g., permafrost cryopegs and subglacial ecosystems), and is a potential analog for habitats on other icy worlds where water-rock reactions may cooccur with saline deposits and subsurface oceans.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2006

Cold water coral mounds revealed

Trevor William; Akihiro Kano; Timothy G. Ferdelman; Jean-Pierre Henriet; Kohei Abe; Miriam S. Andres; Morten Bjerager; E. Browning; Barry Andrew Cragg; Ben De Mol; Boris Dorschel; Anneleen Foubert; Tracy D. Frank; Yuji Fuwa; Philippe Gaillot; Jamshid J. Gharib; Jay M. Gregg; Veerle A.I. Huvenne; Philippe Léonide; Xianghui Li; Kai Mangelsdorf; Akiko Tanaka; Xavier Monteys; Ivana Novosel; Saburo Sakai; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Keiichi Sasaki; Arthur J. Spivack; Chizuru Takashima; Jürgen Titschak

The discovery of mounds and reefs hosting cold-water coral ecosystems along the northeastern Atlantic continental margins has propelled a vigorous effort over the past decade to study the distribution of the mounds, surface sediments, the ecosystems they host, and their environments [Hovland et al., 1994; Freiwald and Roberts, 2005].This effort has involved swath bathymetry, remotely operated vehicle deployments, shallow coring, and seismic surveys. Global coverage is difficult to gauge, but studies indicate that cold-water corals may cover as large an area as the better known warm-water corals that form shallow reefs (284,300 square kilometers) [Freiwald et al., 2005]. Cold-water corals occur in a variety of forms and settings, from small isolated colonies or patch reefs to giant mound structures such as those found west of Ireland.


Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A | 2015

The East Siberian Arctic Shelf: towards further assessment of permafrost-related methane fluxes and role of sea ice.

Natalia Shakhova; Igor Semiletov; V. I. Sergienko; Leopold Lobkovsky; Vladimir Yusupov; A. N. Salyuk; Alexander Salomatin; Denis Chernykh; Denis Kosmach; Gleb Panteleev; D. J. Nicolsky; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Samantha B. Joye; Alexander Charkin; Oleg Dudarev; Alexander Meluzov; Örjan Gustafsson

Sustained release of methane (CH4) to the atmosphere from thawing Arctic permafrost may be a positive and significant feedback to climate warming. Atmospheric venting of CH4 from the East Siberian Arctic Shelf (ESAS) was recently reported to be on par with flux from the Arctic tundra; however, the future scale of these releases remains unclear. Here, based on results of our latest observations, we show that CH4 emissions from this shelf are likely to be determined by the state of subsea permafrost degradation. We observed CH4 emissions from two previously understudied areas of the ESAS: the outer shelf, where subsea permafrost is predicted to be discontinuous or mostly degraded due to long submergence by seawater, and the near shore area, where deep/open taliks presumably form due to combined heating effects of seawater, river run-off, geothermal flux and pre-existing thermokarst. CH4 emissions from these areas emerge from largely thawed sediments via strong flare-like ebullition, producing fluxes that are orders of magnitude greater than fluxes observed in background areas underlain by largely frozen sediments. We suggest that progression of subsea permafrost thawing and decrease in ice extent could result in a significant increase in CH4 emissions from the ESAS.


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.


Applied and Environmental Microbiology | 2015

A halophilic bacterium inhabiting the warm, CaCl2-rich brine of the perennially ice-covered Lake Vanda, McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica.

George S. Tregoning; Megan L. Kempher; Deborah O. Jung; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Samantha B. Joye; Michael T. Madigan

ABSTRACT Lake Vanda is a perennially ice-covered and stratified lake in the McMurdo Dry Valleys, Antarctica. The lake develops a distinct chemocline at about a 50-m depth, where the waters transition from cool, oxic, and fresh to warm, sulfidic, and hypersaline. The bottom water brine is unique, as the highly chaotropic salts CaCl2 and MgCl2 predominate, and CaCl2 levels are the highest of those in any known microbial habitat. Enrichment techniques were used to isolate 15 strains of heterotrophic bacteria from the Lake Vanda brine. Despite direct supplementation of the brine samples with different organic substrates in primary enrichments, the same organism, a relative of the halophilic bacterium Halomonas (Gammaproteobacteria), was isolated from all depths sampled. The Lake Vanda (VAN) strains were obligate aerobes and showed broad pH, salinity, and temperature ranges for growth, consistent with the physicochemical properties of the brine. VAN strains were halophilic and quite CaCl2 tolerant but did not require CaCl2 for growth. The fact that only VAN strain-like organisms appeared in our enrichments hints that the highly chaotropic nature of the Lake Vanda brine may place unusual physiological constraints on the bacterial community that inhabits it.


Geobiology | 2016

Microbial diversity and activity in seafloor brine lake sediments (Alaminos Canyon block 601, Gulf of Mexico).

M. Crespo-Medina; Marshall W. Bowles; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Kimberley S. Hunter; Samantha B. Joye

The microbial communities thriving in deep-sea brines are sustained largely by energy rich substrates supplied through active seepage. Geochemical, microbial activity, and microbial community composition data from different habitats at a Gulf of Mexico brine lake in Alaminos Canyon revealed habitat-linked variability in geochemistry that in turn drove patterns in microbial community composition and activity. The bottom of the brine lake was the most geochemically extreme (highest salinity and nutrient concentrations) habitat and its microbial community exhibited the highest diversity and richness indices. The habitat at the upper halocline of the lake hosted the highest rates of sulfate reduction and methane oxidation, and the largest inventories of dissolved inorganic carbon, particulate organic carbon, and hydrogen sulfide. Statistical analyses indicated a significant positive correlation between the bacterial and archaeal diversity in the bottom brine sample and NH4+ inventories. Other environmental factors with positive correlation with microbial diversity indices were DOC, H2 S, and DIC concentrations. The geochemical regime of different sites within this deep seafloor extreme environment exerts a clear selective force on microbial communities and on patterns of microbial activity.


Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta | 2005

Molecular biogeochemistry of sulfate reduction, methanogenesis and the anaerobic oxidation of methane at Gulf of Mexico cold seeps

Beth N. Orcutt; Antje Boetius; Marcus Elvert; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Samantha B. Joye


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

Impact of natural oil and higher hydrocarbons on microbial diversity, distribution, and activity in Gulf of Mexico cold-seep sediments

Beth N. Orcutt; Samantha B. Joye; Sara Kleindienst; Katrin Knittel; Alban Ramette; Anja Reitz; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Tina Treude; Antje Boetius


Nature Geoscience | 2010

Abiotic nitrous oxide emission from the hypersaline Don Juan Pond in Antarctica

Vladimir A. Samarkin; Michael T. Madigan; Marshall W. Bowles; Karen L. Casciotti; John C. Priscu; Christopher P. McKay; Samantha B. Joye


Nature Geoscience | 2009

Metabolic variability in seafloor brines revealed by carbon and sulphur dynamics

Samantha B. Joye; Vladimir A. Samarkin; Beth N. Orcutt; Ian R. MacDonald; Kai Uwe Hinrichs; Marcus Elvert; Andreas Teske; Karen G. Lloyd; Mark A. Lever; Joseph P. Montoya; Christof Meile

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Kai-Uwe Hinrichs

Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution

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Cassandre S Lazar

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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