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Soda lake

A soda lake or alkaline lake is a lake on the strongly alkaline side of neutrality, typically with a pH value between 9 and 12. They are characterized by high concentrations of carbonate salts, typically sodium carbonate (and related salt complexes), giving rise to their alkalinity. In addition, many soda lakes also contain high concentrations of sodium chloride and other dissolved salts, making them saline or hypersaline lakes as well. High pH and salinity often coincide, because of how soda lakes develop.[a] The resulting hypersaline and highly alkalic soda lakes are considered some of the most extreme aquatic environments on Earth.[1]

In spite of their apparent inhospitability, soda lakes are often highly productive ecosystems, compared to their (pH-neutral) freshwater counterparts. Gross primary production (photosynthesis) rates above 10 g C m−2 day−1 (grams of carbon per square meter per day), over 16 times the global average for lakes and streams (0.6 g C m−2 day−1), have been measured.[2] This makes them the most productive aquatic environments on Earth. An important reason for the high productivity is the virtually unlimited availability of dissolved carbon dioxide.

Soda lakes occur naturally throughout the world (see Table below), typically in arid and semi-arid areas and in connection to tectonic rifts like the East African Rift Valley. The pH of most freshwater lakes is on the alkaline side of neutrality and many exhibit similar water chemistries to soda lakes, only less extreme.

Lake Shala, in the East African Rift Valley

Geology, geochemistry and genesis Edit

In order for a lake to become alkalic, a special combination of geographic, geological and climatic conditions are required. First of all, a suitable topography is needed, that limits the outflow of water from the lake. When the outflow is completely prevented, this is called an endorheic basin. Craters or depressions formed by tectonic rifting often provide such topological depressions. The high alkalinity and salinity arise through evaporation of the lake water. This requires suitable climatic conditions, in order for the inflow to balance outflow through evaporation. The rate at which carbonate salts are dissolved into the lake water also depends on the surrounding geology and can in some cases lead to relatively high alkalinity even in lakes with significant outflow.

 
Tufa columns at Mono Lake, California

Another critical geological condition for the formation of a soda lake is the relative absence of soluble magnesium or calcium. Otherwise, dissolved magnesium (Mg2+) or calcium (Ca2+) will quickly remove the carbonate ions, through the precipitation of minerals such as calcite, magnesite or dolomite, effectively neutralizing the pH of the lake water. This results in a neutral (or slightly basic) salt lake instead. A good example is the Dead Sea, which is very rich in Mg2+. In some soda lakes, inflow of Ca2+ through subterranean seeps, can lead to localized precipitation. In Mono Lake, California and Lake Van, Turkey, such precipitation has formed columns of tufa rising above the lake surface.

Many soda lakes are strongly stratified, with a well-oxygenated upper layer (epilimnion) and an anoxic lower layer (hypolimnion), without oxygen and often high concentrations of sulfide. Stratification can be permanent, or with seasonal mixing. The depth of the oxic/anoxic interface separating the two layers varies from a few centimeters to near the bottom sediments, depending on local conditions. In either case, it represents an important barrier, both physically and between strongly contrasting biochemical conditions.

Biodiversity Edit

A rich diversity of microbial life inhabit soda lakes, often in dense concentrations. This makes them unusually productive ecosystems and leads to permanent or seasonal "algae blooms" with visible colouration in many lakes. The colour varies between particular lakes, depending on their predominant life forms and can range from green to orange or red.[1]

Compared to freshwater ecosystems, life in soda lakes is often completely dominated by prokaryotes, i.e. bacteria and archaea, particularly in those with more "extreme" conditions (higher alkalinity and salinity, or lower oxygen content). However, a rich diversity of eukaryotic algae, protists and fungi have also been encountered in many soda lakes.[3]

Multicellular animals such as crustaceans (notably the brine shrimp Artemia and the copepod Paradiaptomus africanus) and fish (e.g. Alcolapia), are also found in many of the less extreme soda lakes, adapted to the extreme conditions of these alkalic and often saline environments. Particularly in the East African Rift Valley, microorganisms in soda lakes also provide the main food source for vast flocks of the lesser flamingo (Phoeniconaias minor). The cyanobacteria of the genus Arthrospira (formerly Spirulina) are a particularly preferred food source for these birds, owing to their large cell size and high nutritional value.

Microbial diversity surveys and species richness Edit

 
Lesser flamingos (Phoenicopterus minor) feeding on cyanobacteria in Lake Nakuru, Kenya

In general, the microbial biodiversity of soda lakes is relatively poorly studied. Many studies have focused on the primary producers, namely the photosynthesizing cyanobacteria or eukaryotic algae (see Carbon cycle). As studies have traditionally relied on microscopy, identification has been hindered by the fact that many soda lakes harbour poorly studied species, unique to these relatively unusual habitats and in many cases thought to be endemic, i.e. existing only in one lake.[4] The morphology (appearance) of algae and other organisms may also vary from lake to lake, depending on local conditions, making their identification more difficult, which has probably led to several instances of taxonomic confusions in the scientific literature.

Recently, a number of studies have used molecular methods such as DNA fingerprinting or sequencing to study the diversity of organisms in soda lakes.[4][5][6][7][8] These methods are based on DNA extracted directly from the environment and thus do not require microorganisms to be cultured. This is a major advantage, as culturing of novel microorganisms is a laborious technique known to seriously bias the outcome of diversity studies, since only about one in a hundred organisms can be cultured using standard techniques.[9] For microorganisms, the phylogenetic marker gene small subunit (SSU) ribosomal RNA is typically targeted, due to its good properties such as existence in all cellular organisms and ability to be used as a "molecular clock" to trace the evolutionary history of an organism.[10] For instance, 16S ribosomal RNA gene clone libraries revealed that the bacterial community of the lake with the highest salinity was characterized by a higher recent accelerated diversification than the community of a freshwater lake, whereas the phylogenetic diversity in the hypersaline lake was lower than that in a freshwater lake.[11] Culture-independent surveys have revealed that the diversity of microorganisms in soda lakes is very high, with species richness (number of species present) of individual lakes often rivaling that of freshwater ecosystems.[11]

Biogeography and uniqueness Edit

In addition to their rich biodiversity, soda lakes often harbour many unique species, adapted to alkalic conditions and unable to live in environments with neutral pH. These are called alkaliphiles. Organisms also adapted to high salinity are called haloalkaliphiles. Culture-independent genetic surveys have shown that soda lakes contain an unusually high amount of alkaliphilic microorganisms with low genetic similarity to known species.[5][6][7][8] This indicates a long evolutionary history of adaptation to these habitats with few new species from other environments becoming adapted over time.

In-depth genetic surveys also show an unusually low overlap in the microbial community present, between soda lakes with slightly different conditions such as pH and salinity.[3][7] This trend is especially strong in the bottom layer (hypolimnion) of stratified lakes,[4] probably because of the isolated character of such environments. Diversity data from soda lakes suggest the existence of many endemic microbial species, unique to individual lakes.[3][7] This is a controversial finding, since conventional wisdom in microbial ecology dictates that most microbial species are cosmopolitan and dispersed globally, thanks to their enormous population sizes, a famous hypothesis first formulated by Lourens Baas Becking in 1934 ("Everything is everywhere, but the environment selects").[12]

Ecology Edit

Carbon cycle Edit

 
Cyanobacteria of the genus Arthrospira (synonymous to "Spirulina")

Photosynthesis provides the primary energy source for life in soda lakes and this process dominates the activity at the surface. The most important photosynthesizers are typically cyanobacteria, but in many less "extreme" soda lakes, eukaryotes such as green algae (Chlorophyta) can also dominate. Major genera of cyanobacteria typically found in soda lakes include Arhtrospira (formerly Spirulina) (notably A. platensis), Anabaenopsis,[13] Cyanospira, Synechococcus or Chroococcus.[14] In more saline soda lakes, haloalkaliphilic archaea such as Halobacteria and bacteria such as Halorhodospira dominate photosynthesis. However, it is not clear whether this is an autotrophic process or if these require organic carbon from cyanobacterial blooms, occurring during periods of heavy rainfall that dilute the surface waters.[1]

Below the surface, anoxygenic photosynthesizers using other substances than carbon dioxide for photosynthesis also contribute to primary production in many soda lakes. These include purple sulfur bacteria such as Ectothiorhodospiraceae and purple non-sulfur bacteria such as Rhodobacteraceae (for example the species Rhodobaca bogoriensis isolated from Lake Bogoria[15]).

The photosynthesizing bacteria provide a food source for a vast diversity of aerobic and anaerobic organotrophic microorganisms from phyla including Pseudomonadota, Bacteroidota, Spirochaetota, Bacillota, Thermotogota, Deinococcota, Planctomycetota, Actinomycetota, Gemmatimonadota, and more.[1][3] The stepwise anaerobic fermentation of organic compounds originating from the primary producers, results in one-carbon (C1) compounds such as methanol and methylamine.

At the bottom of lakes (in the sediment or hypolimnion, methanogens use these compounds to derive energy, by producing methane, a procedure known as methanogenesis. A diversity of methanogens including the archaeal genera Methanocalculus, Methanolobus, Methanosaeta, Methanosalsus and Methanoculleus have been found in soda lake sediments.[1][16] When the resulting methane reaches the aerobic water of a soda lake, it can be consumed by methane-oxidizing bacteria such as Methylobacter or Methylomicrobium.[1]

Sulfur cycle Edit

Sulfur-reducing bacteria are common in anoxic layers of soda lakes. These reduce sulfate and organic sulfur from dead cells into sulfide (S2−). Anoxic layers of soda lakes are therefore often rich in sulfide. As opposed to neutral lakes, the high pH prohibits the release of hydrogen sulfide (H2S) in gas form. Genera of alkaliphilic sulfur-reducers found in soda lakes include Desulfonatronovibrio and Desulfonatronum.[1] These also play important an ecological role besides in the cycling of sulfur, as they also consume hydrogen, resulting from the fermentation of organic matter.

Sulfur-oxidating bacteria instead derive their energy from oxidation of the sulfide reaching the oxygenated layers of soda lakes. Some of these are photosynthetic sulfur phototrophs, which means that they also require light to derive energy. Examples of alkaliphilic sulfur-oxidizing bacteria are the genera Thioalkalivibrio, Thiorhodospira, Thioalkalimicrobium and Natronhydrogenobacter.[1]

Nitrogen and other nutrients Edit

Nitrogen is a limiting nutrient for growth in many soda lakes, making the internal nitrogen cycle very important for their ecological functioning.[17] One possible source of bio-available nitrogen is diazotrophic cyanobacteria, which can fix nitrogen from the atmosphere during photosynthesis. However, many of the dominant cyanobacteria found in soda lakes such as Arthrospira are probably not able to fix nitrogen.[1] Ammonia, a nitrogen-containing waste product from degradation of dead cells, can be lost from soda lakes through volatilization because of the high pH. This can hinder nitrification, in which ammonia is "recycled" to the bio-available form nitrate. However, ammonia oxidation seems to be efficiently carried out in soda lakes in either case, probably by ammonia-oxidizing bacteria as well as Thaumarchaea.[17]

List of soda lakes Edit

The following table lists some examples of soda lakes by region, listing country, pH and salinity. NA indicates 'data not available':

 
Pangong Tso
 
This astronaut photograph highlights the mostly dry bed of Owens Lake.
 
Satellite image of Sambhar Salt Lake taken in 2010, from WorldWind
 
A screenshot of Lake Eyasi taken from World Wind
 
Flamingos feeding at Lake Nakuru
 
Lake Turkana
Continent Name Country pH Salinity
Africa Wadi El Natrun lakes Egypt 9.5 5%
Malha Crater Lake Sudan 9.5–10.3 NA
Lake Arenguadi (Green Lake) Ethiopia 9.5–9.9[3] 0.25%
Lake Basaka Ethiopia 9.6[3] 0.3%
Lake Shala Ethiopia 9.8[3] 1.8%
Lake Chitu Ethiopia 10.3[3] 5.8%
Lake Abijatta Ethiopia 9.9[3] 3.4%
Lake Magadi Kenya 10 >10%
Lake Bogoria Kenya 10.5 35%
Lake Turkana Kenya 8.5–9.2[18] 0.25%
Lake Nakuru Kenya 10.5 NA
Lake Logipi Kenya 9.5–10.5 2–5%
Lake Sonachi (Crater Lake) Kenya NA NA
Lake Balangida Tanzania NA NA
Lake Manyara Tanzania 9.5–10[19] NA
Lake Natron Tanzania 9–10.5 >10%
Lake Rukwa Tanzania 8–9[19] NA
Lake Eyasi Tanzania 9.3[19] 0.5%
Momela Lakes Tanzania 9.7 22%
Lake Ngami Botswana
Sua Pan Botswana 19%
Rombou Lake Chad 10.2[20] 2%
Asia Kartsakhi Lake Georgia/Turkey NA 0.09%
Kulunda Steppe Lakes Russia NA NA
Lake Khatyn Russia 10 NA
Lake Van Turkey 9.7–9.8 2.3%
Lake Salda Turkey NA NA
Lonar Lake (Crater Lake) India 9.5–10.5[5] 1%
Sambhar Salt Lake India 9.5 7%
Khyagar Lake[20] India 9.5 0.6%
Tso Moriri Salt Lake India 9.0 NA
Tso Kar Salt Lake India 8.8 NA
Surigh Yilganing Kol Aksai Chin, India/China NA NA
Tso Tang Lake Aksai Chin, India/China NA NA
Aksayqin Hu Lake Aksai Chin, India/China NA NA[21]
Lake Hongshan Hu Aksai Chin, India/China NA NA
Tianshuihai lake Aksai Chin, India/China NA NA
North Tianshuihai lake Aksai Chin, India/China NA NA
Kushul lake India NA NA
Pangong Salt Lake India & China 9.4 0.9%[22]
Spanggur Tso (Pongur Tso) India & China NA NA
Guozha lake China NA NA
Qinghai Lake China 9.3[23] 2.2%
Namucuo Lake India 9.4[23] 0.2%
Lake Zabuye (Drangyer) China 10 NA
Torey Lakes Russia, Mongolia NA NA
Taboos-nor Mongolia NA NA
Europe Lake Fehér (Szeged) Hungary NA NA
Böddi-szék Hungary 8.8–9.8[24] NA
Lake Neusiedl (Fertő) Austria, Hungary 9–9.3[24] NA
Rusanda Serbia 9.3[24] NA
Kelemen-szék Hungary 9–9.7[24] NA
Malham Tarn UK 8.0–8.6[25][26] NA
North America Mono Lake US 9.8[17] 8%
Soda Lakes (Nevada) US 9.7 NA
Soap Lake US 9.7 0.7%
Baldwin Lake US NA NA
Alkali Lake (OR) US 11 NA
Summer Lake US NA NA
Owens Lake US NA NA
Borax Lake US NA NA
Manitou Lake Canada NA NA
Goodenough Lake Canada 10.2 NA
Lake Texcoco Mexico 8.8–11.5 8%
Lake Alchichica Mexico 8.9 NA
South America Antofagasta Lake Chile NA NA
Australia Lake Werowrap[20] Australia 9.8 4%

Industrial use Edit

Many water-soluble chemicals are extracted from the soda lake waters worldwide. Lithium carbonate (see Lake Zabuye), potash (see lake Lop Nur and Qinghai Salt Lake Potash), soda ash (see Lake Abijatta and Lake Natron), etc. are extracted in large quantities. Lithium carbonate is a raw material in production of lithium which has applications in lithium storage batteries widely used in modern electronic gadgets and electrically powered automobiles. Water of some soda lakes are rich in dissolved uranium carbonate.[27] Algaculture is carried out on a commercial scale with soda lake water.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Grant, W. D. (2006). Alkaline environments and biodiversity. in Extremophiles, 2006, UNESCO / Eolss Publishers, Oxford, UK
  2. ^ Melack JM, Kilham P (1974). "Photosynthetic rates of phytoplankton in East African alkaline, saline lakes" (PDF). Limnol. Oceanogr. 19 (5): 743–755. Bibcode:1974LimOc..19..743M. doi:10.4319/lo.1974.19.5.0743. Retrieved 27 December 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Lanzén A, Simachew A, Gessesse A, Chmolowska D, Øvreås L (2013). "Surprising Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Diversity, Community Structure and Biogeography of Ethiopian Soda Lakes". PLOS ONE. 8 (8): e72577. Bibcode:2013PLoSO...872577L. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0072577. PMC 3758324. PMID 24023625.
  4. ^ a b c Barberán, A.; Casamayor, E. O. (2010). "Euxinic Freshwater Hypolimnia Promote Bacterial Endemicity in Continental Areas". Microbial Ecology. 61 (2): 465–472. doi:10.1007/s00248-010-9775-6. PMID 21107832. S2CID 6985343.
  5. ^ a b c Surakasi, V. P.; Antony, C. P.; Sharma, S.; Patole, M. S.; Shouche, Y. S. (2010). "Temporal bacterial diversity and detection of putative methanotrophs in surface mats of Lonar crater lake". Journal of Basic Microbiology. 50 (5): 465–474. doi:10.1002/jobm.201000001. PMID 20586073.
  6. ^ a b Dong, H.; Zhang, G.; Jiang, H.; Yu, B.; Chapman, L. R.; Lucas, C. R.; Fields, M. W. (2006). "Microbial Diversity in Sediments of Saline Qinghai Lake, China: Linking Geochemical Controls to Microbial Ecology". Microbial Ecology. 51 (1): 65–82. doi:10.1007/s00248-005-0228-6. PMID 16400537. S2CID 34103123.
  7. ^ a b c d Xiong, J.; Liu, Y.; Lin, X.; Zhang, H.; Zeng, J.; Hou, J.; Yang, Y.; Yao, T.; Knight, R.; Chu, H. (2012). "Geographic distance and pH drive bacterial distribution in alkaline lake sediments across Tibetan Plateau". Environmental Microbiology. 14 (9): 2457–2466. doi:10.1111/j.1462-2920.2012.02799.x. PMC 3477592. PMID 22676420.
  8. ^ a b Wani, A. A.; Surakasi, V. P.; Siddharth, J.; Raghavan, R. G.; Patole, M. S.; Ranade, D.; Shouche, Y. S. (2006). "Molecular analyses of microbial diversity associated with the Lonar soda lake in India: An impact crater in a basalt area". Research in Microbiology. 157 (10): 928–937. doi:10.1016/j.resmic.2006.08.005. PMID 17070674.
  9. ^ Handelsman J (2004). "Metagenomics: application of genomics to uncultured microorganisms". Microbiol Mol Biol Rev. 68 (4): 669–685. doi:10.1128/mmbr.68.4.669-685.2004. PMC 539003. PMID 15590779.
  10. ^ Tringe SG, Hugenholtz P (2008). "A renaissance for the pioneering 16S rRNA gene" (PDF). Curr Opin Microbiol. 11 (5): 442–446. doi:10.1016/j.mib.2008.09.011. PMID 18817891. S2CID 10552013.
  11. ^ a b Wang J (2011). "Do Patterns of Bacterial Diversity along Salinity Gradients Differ from Those Observed for Macroorganisms?". PLOS ONE. 6 (11): e27597. Bibcode:2011PLoSO...627597W. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0027597. PMC 3220692. PMID 22125616.
  12. ^ Baas-Becking, Lourens G.M. (1934), Geobiologie of inleiding tot de milieukunde, The Hague, the Netherlands: W.P. Van Stockum & Zoon
  13. ^ Girma, M. B.; Kifle, D.; Jebessa, H. (2012). "Deep underwater seismic explosion experiments and their possible ecological impact – the case of Lake Arenguade – Central Ethiopian highlands". Limnologica - Ecology and Management of Inland Waters. 42 (3): 212–219. doi:10.1016/j.limno.2011.12.002.
  14. ^ Zavarzin GA, Zhilina TN, Kevbrin VV (1999). "Alkaliphilic microbial community and its functional diversity". Mikrobiologiya. 86: 579–599.
  15. ^ Milford, A. D.; Achenbach, L. A.; Jung, D. O.; Madigan, M. T. (2000). "Rhodobaca bogoriensis gen. nov. And sp. Nov., an alkaliphilic purple nonsulfur bacterium from African Rift Valley soda lakes". Archives of Microbiology. 174 (1–2): 18–27. doi:10.1007/s002030000166. PMID 10985738. S2CID 12430130.
  16. ^ Antony CP, Colin Murrell J, Shouche YS (July 2012). "Molecular diversity of methanogens and identification of Methanolobus sp. as active methylotrophic Archaea in Lonar crater lake sediments". FEMS Microbiol. Ecol. 81 (1): 43–51. doi:10.1111/j.1574-6941.2011.01274.x. PMID 22150151.
  17. ^ a b c Carini, Stephen A.; Joye, Samantha B. (2008). "Nitrification in Mono Lake, California: Activity and community composition during contrasting hydrological regimes". Limnology and Oceanography. 53 (6): 2546–2557. Bibcode:2008LimOc..53.2546C. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.307.8534. doi:10.4319/lo.2008.53.6.2546. S2CID 1869692.
  18. ^ Yuretich, R. F.; Cerling, T. E. (1983). "Hydrogeochemistry of Lake Turkana, Kenya: Mass balance and mineral reactions in an alkaline lake". Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta. 47 (6): 1099–1109. Bibcode:1983GeCoA..47.1099Y. doi:10.1016/0016-7037(83)90240-5.
  19. ^ a b c Hsieh, T. H.; Chen, J. J. J.; Chen, L. H.; Chiang, P. T.; Lee, H. Y. (2011). "Time-course gait analysis of hemiparkinsonian rats following 6-hydroxydopamine lesion". Behavioural Brain Research. 222 (1): 1–9. arXiv:1302.5809. doi:10.1016/j.bbr.2011.03.031. PMID 21435355. S2CID 119601350.
  20. ^ a b c Hammer U.T. (1986). Saline lake ecosystems of the world, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Hingham MA
  21. ^ "Glacial and lake fluctuations in the area of the west Kunlun mountains during the last 45000 years" (PDF). Retrieved 23 July 2013.
  22. ^ T.V. Ramachandra & others. "EIA study near Pangong lake, India". Retrieved 27 December 2012.
  23. ^ a b Xing, P.; Hahn, M. W.; Wu, Q. L. (2009). "Low Taxon Richness of Bacterioplankton in High-Altitude Lakes of the Eastern Tibetan Plateau, with a Predominance of Bacteroidetes and Synechococcus spp". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 75 (22): 7017–7025. Bibcode:2009ApEnM..75.7017X. doi:10.1128/AEM.01544-09. PMC 2786500. PMID 19767472.
  24. ^ a b c d Felföldi, T. S.; Somogyi, B. R.; Márialigeti, K. R.; Vörös, L. (2009). "Characterization of photoautotrophic picoplankton assemblages in turbid, alkaline lakes of the Carpathian Basin (Central Europe)". Journal of Limnology. 68 (2): 385. doi:10.4081/jlimnol.2009.385.
  25. ^ Bradley, P. (March 2002). (Report). Field Studies Council. Archived from the original on 18 October 2008. Retrieved 19 August 2008.
  26. ^ Allan Pentecost (2009). "The Marl Lakes of the British Isles". Freshwater Reviews. 2 (1): 167–197. doi:10.1608/FRJ-2.2.4. S2CID 86157620.
  27. ^ "Uranium in Sambhar lake waters in India" (PDF). Retrieved 5 December 2013.

soda, lake, this, article, about, soda, lakes, general, lakes, named, soda, soda, lake, disambiguation, soda, lake, alkaline, lake, lake, strongly, alkaline, side, neutrality, typically, with, value, between, they, characterized, high, concentrations, carbonat. This article is about soda lakes in general For lakes named Soda see Soda Lake disambiguation A soda lake or alkaline lake is a lake on the strongly alkaline side of neutrality typically with a pH value between 9 and 12 They are characterized by high concentrations of carbonate salts typically sodium carbonate and related salt complexes giving rise to their alkalinity In addition many soda lakes also contain high concentrations of sodium chloride and other dissolved salts making them saline or hypersaline lakes as well High pH and salinity often coincide because of how soda lakes develop a The resulting hypersaline and highly alkalic soda lakes are considered some of the most extreme aquatic environments on Earth 1 In spite of their apparent inhospitability soda lakes are often highly productive ecosystems compared to their pH neutral freshwater counterparts Gross primary production photosynthesis rates above 10 g C m 2 day 1 grams of carbon per square meter per day over 16 times the global average for lakes and streams 0 6 g C m 2 day 1 have been measured 2 This makes them the most productive aquatic environments on Earth An important reason for the high productivity is the virtually unlimited availability of dissolved carbon dioxide Soda lakes occur naturally throughout the world see Table below typically in arid and semi arid areas and in connection to tectonic rifts like the East African Rift Valley The pH of most freshwater lakes is on the alkaline side of neutrality and many exhibit similar water chemistries to soda lakes only less extreme Lake Shala in the East African Rift ValleyContents 1 Geology geochemistry and genesis 2 Biodiversity 2 1 Microbial diversity surveys and species richness 2 2 Biogeography and uniqueness 3 Ecology 3 1 Carbon cycle 3 2 Sulfur cycle 3 3 Nitrogen and other nutrients 4 List of soda lakes 5 Industrial use 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesGeology geochemistry and genesis EditIn order for a lake to become alkalic a special combination of geographic geological and climatic conditions are required First of all a suitable topography is needed that limits the outflow of water from the lake When the outflow is completely prevented this is called an endorheic basin Craters or depressions formed by tectonic rifting often provide such topological depressions The high alkalinity and salinity arise through evaporation of the lake water This requires suitable climatic conditions in order for the inflow to balance outflow through evaporation The rate at which carbonate salts are dissolved into the lake water also depends on the surrounding geology and can in some cases lead to relatively high alkalinity even in lakes with significant outflow nbsp Tufa columns at Mono Lake CaliforniaAnother critical geological condition for the formation of a soda lake is the relative absence of soluble magnesium or calcium Otherwise dissolved magnesium Mg2 or calcium Ca2 will quickly remove the carbonate ions through the precipitation of minerals such as calcite magnesite or dolomite effectively neutralizing the pH of the lake water This results in a neutral or slightly basic salt lake instead A good example is the Dead Sea which is very rich in Mg2 In some soda lakes inflow of Ca2 through subterranean seeps can lead to localized precipitation In Mono Lake California and Lake Van Turkey such precipitation has formed columns of tufa rising above the lake surface Many soda lakes are strongly stratified with a well oxygenated upper layer epilimnion and an anoxic lower layer hypolimnion without oxygen and often high concentrations of sulfide Stratification can be permanent or with seasonal mixing The depth of the oxic anoxic interface separating the two layers varies from a few centimeters to near the bottom sediments depending on local conditions In either case it represents an important barrier both physically and between strongly contrasting biochemical conditions Biodiversity EditA rich diversity of microbial life inhabit soda lakes often in dense concentrations This makes them unusually productive ecosystems and leads to permanent or seasonal algae blooms with visible colouration in many lakes The colour varies between particular lakes depending on their predominant life forms and can range from green to orange or red 1 Compared to freshwater ecosystems life in soda lakes is often completely dominated by prokaryotes i e bacteria and archaea particularly in those with more extreme conditions higher alkalinity and salinity or lower oxygen content However a rich diversity of eukaryotic algae protists and fungi have also been encountered in many soda lakes 3 Multicellular animals such as crustaceans notably the brine shrimp Artemia and the copepod Paradiaptomus africanus and fish e g Alcolapia are also found in many of the less extreme soda lakes adapted to the extreme conditions of these alkalic and often saline environments Particularly in the East African Rift Valley microorganisms in soda lakes also provide the main food source for vast flocks of the lesser flamingo Phoeniconaias minor The cyanobacteria of the genus Arthrospira formerly Spirulina are a particularly preferred food source for these birds owing to their large cell size and high nutritional value Microbial diversity surveys and species richness Edit nbsp Lesser flamingos Phoenicopterus minor feeding on cyanobacteria in Lake Nakuru KenyaIn general the microbial biodiversity of soda lakes is relatively poorly studied Many studies have focused on the primary producers namely the photosynthesizing cyanobacteria or eukaryotic algae see Carbon cycle As studies have traditionally relied on microscopy identification has been hindered by the fact that many soda lakes harbour poorly studied species unique to these relatively unusual habitats and in many cases thought to be endemic i e existing only in one lake 4 The morphology appearance of algae and other organisms may also vary from lake to lake depending on local conditions making their identification more difficult which has probably led to several instances of taxonomic confusions in the scientific literature Recently a number of studies have used molecular methods such as DNA fingerprinting or sequencing to study the diversity of organisms in soda lakes 4 5 6 7 8 These methods are based on DNA extracted directly from the environment and thus do not require microorganisms to be cultured This is a major advantage as culturing of novel microorganisms is a laborious technique known to seriously bias the outcome of diversity studies since only about one in a hundred organisms can be cultured using standard techniques 9 For microorganisms the phylogenetic marker gene small subunit SSU ribosomal RNA is typically targeted due to its good properties such as existence in all cellular organisms and ability to be used as a molecular clock to trace the evolutionary history of an organism 10 For instance 16S ribosomal RNA gene clone libraries revealed that the bacterial community of the lake with the highest salinity was characterized by a higher recent accelerated diversification than the community of a freshwater lake whereas the phylogenetic diversity in the hypersaline lake was lower than that in a freshwater lake 11 Culture independent surveys have revealed that the diversity of microorganisms in soda lakes is very high with species richness number of species present of individual lakes often rivaling that of freshwater ecosystems 11 Biogeography and uniqueness Edit In addition to their rich biodiversity soda lakes often harbour many unique species adapted to alkalic conditions and unable to live in environments with neutral pH These are called alkaliphiles Organisms also adapted to high salinity are called haloalkaliphiles Culture independent genetic surveys have shown that soda lakes contain an unusually high amount of alkaliphilic microorganisms with low genetic similarity to known species 5 6 7 8 This indicates a long evolutionary history of adaptation to these habitats with few new species from other environments becoming adapted over time In depth genetic surveys also show an unusually low overlap in the microbial community present between soda lakes with slightly different conditions such as pH and salinity 3 7 This trend is especially strong in the bottom layer hypolimnion of stratified lakes 4 probably because of the isolated character of such environments Diversity data from soda lakes suggest the existence of many endemic microbial species unique to individual lakes 3 7 This is a controversial finding since conventional wisdom in microbial ecology dictates that most microbial species are cosmopolitan and dispersed globally thanks to their enormous population sizes a famous hypothesis first formulated by Lourens Baas Becking in 1934 Everything is everywhere but the environment selects 12 Ecology EditCarbon cycle Edit nbsp Cyanobacteria of the genus Arthrospira synonymous to Spirulina Photosynthesis provides the primary energy source for life in soda lakes and this process dominates the activity at the surface The most important photosynthesizers are typically cyanobacteria but in many less extreme soda lakes eukaryotes such as green algae Chlorophyta can also dominate Major genera of cyanobacteria typically found in soda lakes include Arhtrospira formerly Spirulina notably A platensis Anabaenopsis 13 Cyanospira Synechococcus or Chroococcus 14 In more saline soda lakes haloalkaliphilic archaea such as Halobacteria and bacteria such as Halorhodospira dominate photosynthesis However it is not clear whether this is an autotrophic process or if these require organic carbon from cyanobacterial blooms occurring during periods of heavy rainfall that dilute the surface waters 1 Below the surface anoxygenic photosynthesizers using other substances than carbon dioxide for photosynthesis also contribute to primary production in many soda lakes These include purple sulfur bacteria such as Ectothiorhodospiraceae and purple non sulfur bacteria such as Rhodobacteraceae for example the species Rhodobaca bogoriensis isolated from Lake Bogoria 15 The photosynthesizing bacteria provide a food source for a vast diversity of aerobic and anaerobic organotrophic microorganisms from phyla including Pseudomonadota Bacteroidota Spirochaetota Bacillota Thermotogota Deinococcota Planctomycetota Actinomycetota Gemmatimonadota and more 1 3 The stepwise anaerobic fermentation of organic compounds originating from the primary producers results in one carbon C1 compounds such as methanol and methylamine At the bottom of lakes in the sediment or hypolimnion methanogens use these compounds to derive energy by producing methane a procedure known as methanogenesis A diversity of methanogens including the archaeal genera Methanocalculus Methanolobus Methanosaeta Methanosalsus and Methanoculleus have been found in soda lake sediments 1 16 When the resulting methane reaches the aerobic water of a soda lake it can be consumed by methane oxidizing bacteria such as Methylobacter or Methylomicrobium 1 Sulfur cycle Edit Sulfur reducing bacteria are common in anoxic layers of soda lakes These reduce sulfate and organic sulfur from dead cells into sulfide S2 Anoxic layers of soda lakes are therefore often rich in sulfide As opposed to neutral lakes the high pH prohibits the release of hydrogen sulfide H2S in gas form Genera of alkaliphilic sulfur reducers found in soda lakes include Desulfonatronovibrio and Desulfonatronum 1 These also play important an ecological role besides in the cycling of sulfur as they also consume hydrogen resulting from the fermentation of organic matter Sulfur oxidating bacteria instead derive their energy from oxidation of the sulfide reaching the oxygenated layers of soda lakes Some of these are photosynthetic sulfur phototrophs which means that they also require light to derive energy Examples of alkaliphilic sulfur oxidizing bacteria are the genera Thioalkalivibrio Thiorhodospira Thioalkalimicrobium and Natronhydrogenobacter 1 Nitrogen and other nutrients Edit Nitrogen is a limiting nutrient for growth in many soda lakes making the internal nitrogen cycle very important for their ecological functioning 17 One possible source of bio available nitrogen is diazotrophic cyanobacteria which can fix nitrogen from the atmosphere during photosynthesis However many of the dominant cyanobacteria found in soda lakes such as Arthrospira are probably not able to fix nitrogen 1 Ammonia a nitrogen containing waste product from degradation of dead cells can be lost from soda lakes through volatilization because of the high pH This can hinder nitrification in which ammonia is recycled to the bio available form nitrate However ammonia oxidation seems to be efficiently carried out in soda lakes in either case probably by ammonia oxidizing bacteria as well as Thaumarchaea 17 List of soda lakes EditThe following table lists some examples of soda lakes by region listing country pH and salinity NA indicates data not available nbsp Pangong Tso nbsp This astronaut photograph highlights the mostly dry bed of Owens Lake nbsp Satellite image of Sambhar Salt Lake taken in 2010 from WorldWind nbsp A screenshot of Lake Eyasi taken from World Wind nbsp Flamingos feeding at Lake Nakuru nbsp Lake TurkanaContinent Name Country pH SalinityAfrica Wadi El Natrun lakes Egypt 9 5 5 Malha Crater Lake Sudan 9 5 10 3 NALake Arenguadi Green Lake Ethiopia 9 5 9 9 3 0 25 Lake Basaka Ethiopia 9 6 3 0 3 Lake Shala Ethiopia 9 8 3 1 8 Lake Chitu Ethiopia 10 3 3 5 8 Lake Abijatta Ethiopia 9 9 3 3 4 Lake Magadi Kenya 10 gt 10 Lake Bogoria Kenya 10 5 35 Lake Turkana Kenya 8 5 9 2 18 0 25 Lake Nakuru Kenya 10 5 NALake Logipi Kenya 9 5 10 5 2 5 Lake Sonachi Crater Lake Kenya NA NALake Balangida Tanzania NA NALake Manyara Tanzania 9 5 10 19 NALake Natron Tanzania 9 10 5 gt 10 Lake Rukwa Tanzania 8 9 19 NALake Eyasi Tanzania 9 3 19 0 5 Momela Lakes Tanzania 9 7 22 Lake Ngami BotswanaSua Pan Botswana 19 Rombou Lake Chad 10 2 20 2 Asia Kartsakhi Lake Georgia Turkey NA 0 09 Kulunda Steppe Lakes Russia NA NALake Khatyn Russia 10 NALake Van Turkey 9 7 9 8 2 3 Lake Salda Turkey NA NALonar Lake Crater Lake India 9 5 10 5 5 1 Sambhar Salt Lake India 9 5 7 Khyagar Lake 20 India 9 5 0 6 Tso Moriri Salt Lake India 9 0 NATso Kar Salt Lake India 8 8 NASurigh Yilganing Kol Aksai Chin India China NA NATso Tang Lake Aksai Chin India China NA NAAksayqin Hu Lake Aksai Chin India China NA NA 21 Lake Hongshan Hu Aksai Chin India China NA NATianshuihai lake Aksai Chin India China NA NANorth Tianshuihai lake Aksai Chin India China NA NAKushul lake India NA NAPangong Salt Lake India amp China 9 4 0 9 22 Spanggur Tso Pongur Tso India amp China NA NAGuozha lake China NA NAQinghai Lake China 9 3 23 2 2 Namucuo Lake India 9 4 23 0 2 Lake Zabuye Drangyer China 10 NATorey Lakes Russia Mongolia NA NATaboos nor Mongolia NA NAEurope Lake Feher Szeged Hungary NA NABoddi szek Hungary 8 8 9 8 24 NALake Neusiedl Ferto Austria Hungary 9 9 3 24 NARusanda Serbia 9 3 24 NAKelemen szek Hungary 9 9 7 24 NAMalham Tarn UK 8 0 8 6 25 26 NANorth America Mono Lake US 9 8 17 8 Soda Lakes Nevada US 9 7 NASoap Lake US 9 7 0 7 Baldwin Lake US NA NAAlkali Lake OR US 11 NASummer Lake US NA NAOwens Lake US NA NABorax Lake US NA NAManitou Lake Canada NA NAGoodenough Lake Canada 10 2 NALake Texcoco Mexico 8 8 11 5 8 Lake Alchichica Mexico 8 9 NASouth America Antofagasta Lake Chile NA NAAustralia Lake Werowrap 20 Australia 9 8 4 Industrial use EditMany water soluble chemicals are extracted from the soda lake waters worldwide Lithium carbonate see Lake Zabuye potash see lake Lop Nur and Qinghai Salt Lake Potash soda ash see Lake Abijatta and Lake Natron etc are extracted in large quantities Lithium carbonate is a raw material in production of lithium which has applications in lithium storage batteries widely used in modern electronic gadgets and electrically powered automobiles Water of some soda lakes are rich in dissolved uranium carbonate 27 Algaculture is carried out on a commercial scale with soda lake water See also Edit nbsp Lakes portalAlkali soils Residual sodium carbonate index Dry lakeNotes Edit see Geology geochemistry and genesis References Edit a b c d e f g h i Grant W D 2006 Alkaline environments and biodiversity in Extremophiles 2006 UNESCO Eolss Publishers Oxford UK Melack JM Kilham P 1974 Photosynthetic rates of phytoplankton in East African alkaline saline lakes PDF Limnol Oceanogr 19 5 743 755 Bibcode 1974LimOc 19 743M doi 10 4319 lo 1974 19 5 0743 Retrieved 27 December 2012 a b c d e f g h i Lanzen A Simachew A Gessesse A Chmolowska D Ovreas L 2013 Surprising Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Diversity Community Structure and Biogeography of Ethiopian Soda Lakes PLOS ONE 8 8 e72577 Bibcode 2013PLoSO 872577L doi 10 1371 journal pone 0072577 PMC 3758324 PMID 24023625 a b c Barberan A Casamayor E O 2010 Euxinic Freshwater Hypolimnia Promote Bacterial Endemicity in Continental Areas Microbial Ecology 61 2 465 472 doi 10 1007 s00248 010 9775 6 PMID 21107832 S2CID 6985343 a b c Surakasi V P Antony C P Sharma S Patole M S Shouche Y S 2010 Temporal bacterial diversity and detection of putative methanotrophs in surface mats of Lonar crater lake Journal of Basic Microbiology 50 5 465 474 doi 10 1002 jobm 201000001 PMID 20586073 a b Dong H Zhang G Jiang H Yu B Chapman L R Lucas C R Fields M W 2006 Microbial Diversity in Sediments of Saline Qinghai Lake China Linking Geochemical Controls to Microbial Ecology Microbial Ecology 51 1 65 82 doi 10 1007 s00248 005 0228 6 PMID 16400537 S2CID 34103123 a b c d Xiong J Liu Y Lin X Zhang H Zeng J Hou J Yang Y Yao T Knight R Chu H 2012 Geographic distance and pH drive bacterial distribution in alkaline lake sediments across Tibetan Plateau Environmental Microbiology 14 9 2457 2466 doi 10 1111 j 1462 2920 2012 02799 x PMC 3477592 PMID 22676420 a b Wani A A Surakasi V P Siddharth J Raghavan R G Patole M S Ranade D Shouche Y S 2006 Molecular analyses of microbial diversity associated with the Lonar soda lake in India An impact crater in a basalt area Research in Microbiology 157 10 928 937 doi 10 1016 j resmic 2006 08 005 PMID 17070674 Handelsman J 2004 Metagenomics application of genomics to uncultured microorganisms Microbiol Mol Biol Rev 68 4 669 685 doi 10 1128 mmbr 68 4 669 685 2004 PMC 539003 PMID 15590779 Tringe SG Hugenholtz P 2008 A renaissance for the pioneering 16S rRNA gene PDF Curr Opin Microbiol 11 5 442 446 doi 10 1016 j mib 2008 09 011 PMID 18817891 S2CID 10552013 a b Wang J 2011 Do Patterns of Bacterial Diversity along Salinity Gradients Differ from Those Observed for Macroorganisms PLOS ONE 6 11 e27597 Bibcode 2011PLoSO 627597W doi 10 1371 journal pone 0027597 PMC 3220692 PMID 22125616 Baas Becking Lourens G M 1934 Geobiologie of inleiding tot de milieukunde The Hague the Netherlands W P Van Stockum amp Zoon Girma M B Kifle D Jebessa H 2012 Deep underwater seismic explosion experiments and their possible ecological impact the case of Lake Arenguade Central Ethiopian highlands Limnologica Ecology and Management of Inland Waters 42 3 212 219 doi 10 1016 j limno 2011 12 002 Zavarzin GA Zhilina TN Kevbrin VV 1999 Alkaliphilic microbial community and its functional diversity Mikrobiologiya 86 579 599 Milford A D Achenbach L A Jung D O Madigan M T 2000 Rhodobaca bogoriensis gen nov And sp Nov an alkaliphilic purple nonsulfur bacterium from African Rift Valley soda lakes Archives of Microbiology 174 1 2 18 27 doi 10 1007 s002030000166 PMID 10985738 S2CID 12430130 Antony CP Colin Murrell J Shouche YS July 2012 Molecular diversity of methanogens and identification of Methanolobus sp as active methylotrophic Archaea in Lonar crater lake sediments FEMS Microbiol Ecol 81 1 43 51 doi 10 1111 j 1574 6941 2011 01274 x PMID 22150151 a b c Carini Stephen A Joye Samantha B 2008 Nitrification in Mono Lake California Activity and community composition during contrasting hydrological regimes Limnology and Oceanography 53 6 2546 2557 Bibcode 2008LimOc 53 2546C CiteSeerX 10 1 1 307 8534 doi 10 4319 lo 2008 53 6 2546 S2CID 1869692 Yuretich R F Cerling T E 1983 Hydrogeochemistry of Lake Turkana Kenya Mass balance and mineral reactions in an alkaline lake Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 47 6 1099 1109 Bibcode 1983GeCoA 47 1099Y doi 10 1016 0016 7037 83 90240 5 a b c Hsieh T H Chen J J J Chen L H Chiang P T Lee H Y 2011 Time course gait analysis of hemiparkinsonian rats following 6 hydroxydopamine lesion Behavioural Brain Research 222 1 1 9 arXiv 1302 5809 doi 10 1016 j bbr 2011 03 031 PMID 21435355 S2CID 119601350 a b c Hammer U T 1986 Saline lake ecosystems of the world Kluwer Academic Publishers Hingham MA Glacial and lake fluctuations in the area of the west Kunlun mountains during the last 45000 years PDF Retrieved 23 July 2013 T V Ramachandra amp others EIA study near Pangong lake India Retrieved 27 December 2012 a b Xing P Hahn M W Wu Q L 2009 Low Taxon Richness of Bacterioplankton in High Altitude Lakes of the Eastern Tibetan Plateau with a Predominance of Bacteroidetes and Synechococcus spp Applied and Environmental Microbiology 75 22 7017 7025 Bibcode 2009ApEnM 75 7017X doi 10 1128 AEM 01544 09 PMC 2786500 PMID 19767472 a b c d Felfoldi T S Somogyi B R Marialigeti K R Voros L 2009 Characterization of photoautotrophic picoplankton assemblages in turbid alkaline lakes of the Carpathian Basin Central Europe Journal of Limnology 68 2 385 doi 10 4081 jlimnol 2009 385 Bradley P March 2002 White clawed Crayfish Austropotamobius pallipes At Craven Limestone Complex SAC North Yorkshire Report Field Studies Council Archived from the original on 18 October 2008 Retrieved 19 August 2008 Allan Pentecost 2009 The Marl Lakes of the British Isles Freshwater Reviews 2 1 167 197 doi 10 1608 FRJ 2 2 4 S2CID 86157620 Uranium in Sambhar lake waters in India PDF Retrieved 5 December 2013 Retrieved 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