Sinkholes below Lake Huron hold strange ecosystem:  researchers
Last Updated: Wednesday, February 25, 2009  | 2:07 PM ET _Comments10_ 
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By Sharon Oosthoek, _CBC News_ (http://www.cbc.ca/news/credit.html)  

 
The  Middle Island sinkhole is open to Lake Huron, creating a gradient of 
biological  activity. A nine-metre boat is also visible in this aerial photo 
for 
sense of  scale. (Scott Kendall/Bopi Biddanda/Grand Valley State  University) 
Twenty metres below the surface of Lake Huron, scientists have discovered  
peculiar sinkholes where a bizarre ecosystem at odds with the rest of the lake  
flourishes. 
The huge lake's freshwater fish shun the dense, salty, oxygen-deprived waters 
 of these sinkholes off northeastern Michigan. 
Instead, brilliant purple mats of cyanobacteria — cousins of microbes found  
at the bottom of permanently ice-covered lakes in Antarctica — and pallid,  
floating, ponytail-like microbes thrive. 
Groundwater from beneath the lake is dissolving minerals from the ancient  
seabed and carrying them into the lake to form these exotic, extreme  
environments, says aquatic ecologist Bopaiah Biddanda of Michigan's Grand 
Valley  State 
University, a leader of the team studying the sinkhole ecosystems. 
"These are almost primordial Earth conditions, with high sulphur and low  
oxygen like in the ancient oceans that covered the Earth three billion years  
ago," Biddanda told CBC News. 
"It gives us a window into the past and who knows what value it will  hold." 
The researchers describe this little-known underwater habitat in this week's  
issue of Eos, published by the American Geophysical Union. 
Although above-ground sinkholes in the area were discovered decades ago, the  
submerged sinkholes were only recently uncovered. 
Discovered 8 years ago
In 2001, researchers with the Connecticut-based Institute for Exploration  
stumbled across them during an underwater archeological survey for shipwrecks 
in 
 Michigan's Thunder Bay National Marine Sanctuary. 
Scientists began to explore these sinkholes a couple of years later, finding  
some just 20 metres below the surface and others extending 100 metres down,  
where the sun never shines. 
But their findings have trickled in over the last few years because of the  
logistical problems in exploring lakebed sinkholes. 
"Finding these little spots in a huge lake — you can't even compare it to  
looking for a needle in a haystack," said Biddanda. 
The most recent findings show an ecosystem that has more in common with  
Antarctic lakes and deep-sea, hydrothermal vents than it does with a freshwater 
 
lake. 
"We were amazed to find these brilliant cyanobacteria mats," said Biddanda.  
DNA sequencing of the purple mats show they are closely related to mats found 
in  the ice-covered, oxygen-poor Antarctic lakes. 
Biddanda suspects similar ecosystems once existed all around the Earth but  
largely disappeared as the planet's atmosphere became increasingly  
oxygen-rich. 
The team, including researchers from the U.S. National Oceanic and  
Atmospheric Administration, suspects similar sinkholes exist under the other  
Great 
Lakes because, with the exception of Lake Superior, the lakebeds are all  
composed of limestone, with ancient aquifers running beneath. 
The researchers will continue to study the sinkholes this summer, keeping a  
sharp eye out for the possible discovery of never-before-seen organisms and  
biochemical processes. 
_http://www.cbc.ca/technology/story/2009/02/25/sinkholes.html_ 
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