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Dive into the research topics where Zijun Wu is active.

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Featured researches published by Zijun Wu.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2012

Microbial diversity and biomineralization in low-temperature hydrothermal iron–silica-rich precipitates of the Lau Basin hydrothermal field

Jiangtao Li; Huaiyang Zhou; Xiaotong Peng; Zijun Wu; Shun Chen; Jiasong Fang

Iron-silica-rich low-temperature hydrothermal precipitates were collected from the CDE hydrothermal field located at the East Lau Spreading Center. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the precipitates were dominated by the members of α-proteobacteria and marine group I archaea. Ultrastructural analysis suggested the bacteriogenic origin of the iron-silica-rich deposits. Distinctive biosignatures detected included straight filaments, helical stalks and curved irregular filaments, which were similar in appearance to those structures excreted by the known iron-oxidizing genera Leptothrix spp., Gallionella spp. and Mariprofundus spp. 16S rRNA gene analysis confirmed the presence of neutrophilic iron-oxidizing bacteria with the detection of phylotypes clustering with Gallionella spp. and the proposed ζ-proteobacteria class. Mineralogy and bulk geochemical analyses showed that the precipitates were dominated by amorphous silica with low amounts of iron. Based on microbiological, geochemical and mineralogical analyses, we conclude that silicification was a common process and microbial cells and related ultrastructures likely acted as nucleation templates for silica precipitation in the CDE hydrothermal field.


Biometals | 2009

Ultrastructural evidence for iron accumulation within the tube of Vestimentiferan Ridgeia piscesae

Xiaotong Peng; Huaiyang Zhou; Huiqiang Yao; Jiangtao Li; Zijun Wu

This study reports on the accumulation of iron within the tube wall of the deep sea vent macro invertebrate Vestimentiferan Ridgeia piscesae collected from Juan de Fuca ridge. Combining an array of approaches including environmental scanning electron microscope (ESEM), electron probe micro-analysis (EPMA), X-ray microanalysis (EDS) and transmission electron microscope (TEM), we provide evidences for the influence of prokaryotic organisms on the accumulation of metals on and within the tube wall. Two types of iron-rich minerals such as iron oxides and framboidal pyrites are identified within or on the tube wall. Our results reveal the presence of prokaryotic organism is apparently responsible for the early accumulation of iron-rich minerals in the tube wall. The implications of the biomineralisation of iron in tube wall at hydrothermal vents are discussed.


Geomicrobiology Journal | 2016

Microbial Distribution in a Hydrothermal Plume of the Southwest Indian Ridge

Jiangtao Li; Huaiyang Zhou; Jiasong Fang; Zijun Wu; Xiaotong Peng

abstract Hydrothermal plumes are widely distributed throughout the global spreading ridges, yet few of them are microbiologically explored. The ultraslow-spreading ridges, recently recognized as a unique, new class of mid-ocean-ridge system, have provided surprises and new insights in hydrothermal system research. A suite of water column samples including both hydrothermal plume samples and ambient seawater were collected at different depths from the ultraslow-spreading Southwest Indian Ridge (SWIR) in 2010. We use molecular approaches such as clone libraries, denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) and quantitative PCR to determine microbial community compositions and their spatial variability within the hydrothermal plume and seawater. Phylogenetic analysis showed that plume samples were mainly dominated by members of α-Proteobacteria and γ-Proteobacteria and members of marine group I group within the Crenarchaeota. Within the hydrothermal plume, archaeal populations were spatially homogeneous, while bacterial compositions were heterogeneous and remarkably distinct at different depths. Moreover, several lineages, closely related to known Mn(II) oxidizers were found to be abundant and even predominant within the plume bacterial communities. DGGE band patterns showed that there was no significant difference in microbial compositions between the samples of hydrothermal plume and ambient seawater. Taken together, we inferred that microbial communities in the SWIR hydrothermal plumes were sourced from ambient seawater rather than from seafloor vent-derived niches. This is the first report on the characteristics of microbial community structures in hydrothermal plume and ambient seawater in the Southwest Indian Ridge.


Science China-earth Sciences | 2016

Quantifying the sources of dissolved inorganic carbon within the sulfate-methane transition zone in nearshore sediments of Qi’ao Island, Pearl River Estuary, Southern China

Zijun Wu; Huaiyang Zhou; Dezhang Ren; Hang Gao; Jiangtao Li

The significance of the various biogeochemical pathways that drive carbon cycling and the relative fractions of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC) produced by these reactions within the sulfate-methane transition zone (SMTZ) are still being debated. Unraveling these processes is important to our understanding of the benthic DIC sources and their contributions to the global carbon cycle. Here, we measure pore water geochemistry (chlorine, sulfate, methane, Ca2+, Mg2+, DIC and δ13C-DIC) as well as solid geochemistry (sedimentary organic carbon (SOC) and δ13C of SOC) in nearshore sediments from Qi’ao Island in the Pearl River Estuary of the Southern China Sea. Our analysis indicates that SOC originates from the mixing of carbon from terrestrial and marine sources, and that terrestrial materials dominate the net loss of SOC during the degradation of organic matter, especially at sites located near the river outlets. Sulfate reduction via SOC degradation is not appreciable in the upper sediment layer due to conservative mixing-dilution by freshwater. However, below this layer, the anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) and methanogenesis occur. Within the SMTZ, the δ13C mass balance shows that the proportions of DIC derived from organoclastic SO42- reduction (OSR) and AOM are 50.3% to 66.7% and 0.1% to 17.9%, respectively, whereas methanogenesis contributes 17.0% to 43.9%. This study reveals that the upward diffusion of DIC from ongoing methanogenesis significantly influences carbon cycling within the SMTZ in these estuarine sediments. As a result, we suggest that the plots of the ratio of change in sulfate to change in DIC in pore water should be used with caution when discriminating between sulfate reduction pathways in methane-rich sediments.


Acta Oceanologica Sinica | 2014

Rates of bacterial sulfate reduction and their response to experimental temperature changes in coastal sediments of Qi'ao Island, Zhujiang River Estuary in China

Zijun Wu; Huaiyang Zhou; Xiaotong Peng; Jiangtao Li; Guang-Qian Chen

Subtropical sediment cores (QA09-1 and QA12-9) from the coastal zone of Qi’ao Island in the Zhujiang River Estuary were used to determine the rates of sulfate reduction and their response to experimental temperature changes. The depth distribution of the sulfate reduction rates was measured from whole-core incubations with radioactive tracer 35SO42−, and peaks of 181.19 nmol/(cm3·d) and 107.49 nmol/(cm3·d) were exhibited at stations QA09-1 and QA12-9, respectively. The profiles of the pore water methane and sulfate concentrations demonstrated that anaerobic oxidation of methane occurred in the study area, which resulted in an increase in the sulfate reduction rate at the base of the sulfate-reducing zone. Meanwhile, the sulfate concentration was not a major limiting factor for controlling the rates of sulfate reduction. In addition, the incubation of the sediment slurries in a block with a temperature gradient showed that the optimum temperature for the sulfate reduction reaction was 36°C. The Arrhenius plot was linear from the lowest temperature to the optimum temperature, and the activation energy was at the lower end of the range of previously reported values. The results suggested that the ambient temperature regime of marine environments probably selected for the microbial population with the best-suited physiology for the respective environment.


Frontiers in Microbiology | 2017

Oxidative Weathering and Microbial Diversity of an Inactive Seafloor Hydrothermal Sulfide Chimney

Jiangtao Li; Jiamei Cui; Qunhui Yang; Guojie Cui; Bingbing Wei; Zijun Wu; Yong Wang; Huaiyang Zhou

When its hydrothermal supply ceases, hydrothermal sulfide chimneys become inactive and commonly experience oxidative weathering on the seafloor. However, little is known about the oxidative weathering of inactive sulfide chimneys, nor about associated microbial community structures and their succession during this weathering process. In this work, an inactive sulfide chimney and a young chimney in the early sulfate stage of formation were collected from the Main Endeavor Field of the Juan de Fuca Ridge. To assess oxidative weathering, the ultrastructures of secondary alteration products accumulating on the chimney surface were examined and the presence of possible Fe-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) was investigated. The results of ultrastructure observation revealed that FeOB-associated ultrastructures with indicative morphologies were abundantly present. Iron oxidizers primarily consisted of members closely related to Gallionella spp. and Mariprofundus spp., indicating Fe-oxidizing species likely promote the oxidative weathering of inactive sulfide chimneys. Abiotic accumulation of Fe-rich substances further indicates that oxidative weathering is a complex, dynamic process, alternately controlled by FeOB and by abiotic oxidization. Although hydrothermal fluid flow had ceased, inactive chimneys still accommodate an abundant and diverse microbiome whose microbial composition and metabolic potential dramatically differ from their counterparts at active vents. Bacterial lineages within current inactive chimney are dominated by members of α-, δ-, and γ-Proteobacteria and they are deduced to be closely involved in a diverse set of geochemical processes including iron oxidation, nitrogen fixation, ammonia oxidation and denitrification. At last, by examining microbial communities within hydrothermal chimneys at different formation stages, a general microbial community succession can be deduced from early formation stages of a sulfate chimney to actively mature sulfide structures, and then to the final inactive altered sulfide chimney. Our findings provide valuable insights into the microbe-involved oxidative weathering process and into microbial succession occurring at inactive hydrothermal sulfide chimney after high-temperature hydrothermal fluids have ceased venting.


Geomicrobiology Journal | 2014

Aerobic and Anaerobic Ammonia-Oxidizing Microorganisms in Low-Temperature Hydrothermal Fe-Si-rich Precipitates of the Southwestern Pacific Ocean

Jiangtao Li; Yannan Sun; Jiasong Fang; Wei Xie; Xiaotong Peng; Liang Dong; Zijun Wu; Huaiyang Zhou

Fe-Si-rich hydrothermal precipitates are distributed widely in low-temperature diffusing hydrothermal fields. Due to the significant contribution of Fe-oxidizing bacteria (FeOB) to the formation of this type of hydrothermal precipitates, previous studies focus mostly on investigating FeOB-related microbial populations, albeit these precipitates actually accommodate abundant other microbial communities, particularly those involved in marine nitrogen cycle. In this study, we investigated the composition, diversity, and abundance of aerobic and anaerobic ammonia-oxidizing microorganisms dwelling in low-temperature Fe-Si-rich hydrothermal precipitates of the Lau Integrated Study Site based on ammonia monooxygenase (amoA) gene and 16S rRNA gene. Phylogenetic analysis revealed the common presence of ammonia-oxidizing archaea (AOA), Nitrosospira-like ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) and anaerobic ammonium-oxidizing anammox (bacteria) in the Fe-Si-rich hydrothermal precipitates. Quantitative PCR analysis showed that AOA dominated the whole microbial community and the abundance of archaeal amoA gene was 2–3 orders of magnitude higher than that of AOB and anammox bacteria. Result of glycerol dialkyl glycerol tetraether analysis confirmed the presence and abundance of AOA. Our results suggest that microbial ammonia oxidations, especially archaeal aerobic ammonia oxidation, are prevalent and pivotal processes in low-temperature diffusing hydrothermal fields. Supplemental materials are available for this article. Go to the publishers online edition of Geomicrobiology Journal to view the supplemental file.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011

Diversity of biogenic minerals in low-temperature Si-rich deposits from a newly discovered hydrothermal field on the ultraslow spreading Southwest Indian Ridge

Xiaotong Peng; Shun Chen; Huaiyang Zhou; Lixue Zhang; Zijun Wu; Jiangtao Li; Jiwei Li; Hengchao Xu


Sedimentary Geology | 2010

Intracellular and extracellular mineralization of a microbial community in the Edmond deep-sea vent field environment

Xiaotong Peng; Huaiyang Zhou; Jiangtao Li; Jiwei Li; Shun Chen; Huiqiang Yao; Zijun Wu


Journal of Asian Earth Sciences | 2011

Characteristics and source of inorganic and organic compounds in the sediments from two hydrothermal fields of the Central Indian and Mid-Atlantic Ridges

Xiaotong Peng; Jiwei Li; Huaiyang Zhou; Zijun Wu; Jiangtao Li; Shun Chen; Huiqiang Yao

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Xiaotong Peng

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shun Chen

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Huiqiang Yao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Jiwei Li

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Linxi Yuan

University of Science and Technology of China

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