Open Access
Open access
volume 8 issue 1 publication number 3367

Alteration of rocks by endolithic organisms is one of the pathways for the beginning of soils on Earth

Nikita Mergelov 1
Ilya Shorkunov 1
Elya Zazovskaya 1
Vasily Shishkov 1
Victoria Krupskaya 3
Alexander Cherkinsky 5
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2018-02-20
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR0.874
CiteScore6.7
Impact factor3.9
ISSN20452322
Multidisciplinary
Abstract

Subaerial endolithic systems of the current extreme environments on Earth provide exclusive insight into emergence and development of soils in the Precambrian when due to various stresses on the surfaces of hard rocks the cryptic niches inside them were much more plausible habitats for organisms than epilithic ones. Using an actualistic approach we demonstrate that transformation of silicate rocks by endolithic organisms is one of the possible pathways for the beginning of soils on Earth. This process led to the formation of soil-like bodies on rocks in situ and contributed to the raise of complexity in subaerial geosystems. Endolithic systems of East Antarctica lack the noise from vascular plants and are among the best available natural models to explore organo-mineral interactions of a very old “phylogenetic age” (cyanobacteria-to-mineral, fungi-to-mineral, lichen-to-mineral). On the basis of our case study from East Antarctica we demonstrate that relatively simple endolithic systems of microbial and/or cryptogamic origin that exist and replicate on Earth over geological time scales employ the principles of organic matter stabilization strikingly similar to those known for modern full-scale soils of various climates.

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GOST Copy
Mergelov N. et al. Alteration of rocks by endolithic organisms is one of the pathways for the beginning of soils on Earth // Scientific Reports. 2018. Vol. 8. No. 1. 3367
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
Mergelov N., Mueller C. W., Prater I., Shorkunov I., Dolgikh A., Zazovskaya E., Shishkov V., Krupskaya V., Abrosimov K., Cherkinsky A., Goryachkin S. Alteration of rocks by endolithic organisms is one of the pathways for the beginning of soils on Earth // Scientific Reports. 2018. Vol. 8. No. 1. 3367
RIS |
Cite this
RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1038/s41598-018-21682-6
UR - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-21682-6
TI - Alteration of rocks by endolithic organisms is one of the pathways for the beginning of soils on Earth
T2 - Scientific Reports
AU - Mergelov, Nikita
AU - Mueller, C. W.
AU - Prater, Isabel
AU - Shorkunov, Ilya
AU - Dolgikh, Andrey
AU - Zazovskaya, Elya
AU - Shishkov, Vasily
AU - Krupskaya, Victoria
AU - Abrosimov, Konstantin
AU - Cherkinsky, Alexander
AU - Goryachkin, Sergey
PY - 2018
DA - 2018/02/20
PB - Springer Nature
IS - 1
VL - 8
PMID - 29463846
SN - 2045-2322
ER -
BibTex
Cite this
BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2018_Mergelov,
author = {Nikita Mergelov and C. W. Mueller and Isabel Prater and Ilya Shorkunov and Andrey Dolgikh and Elya Zazovskaya and Vasily Shishkov and Victoria Krupskaya and Konstantin Abrosimov and Alexander Cherkinsky and Sergey Goryachkin},
title = {Alteration of rocks by endolithic organisms is one of the pathways for the beginning of soils on Earth},
journal = {Scientific Reports},
year = {2018},
volume = {8},
publisher = {Springer Nature},
month = {feb},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-21682-6},
number = {1},
pages = {3367},
doi = {10.1038/s41598-018-21682-6}
}