Published in:
01-04-2015 | Editorial
Cyanobacterial biodiversity and associated ecosystem services: introduction to the special issue
Author:
Anurag Chaurasia
Published in:
Biodiversity and Conservation
|
Issue 4/2015
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Excerpt
Cyanobacteria, one of the oldest groups of known organisms, are photosynthetic prokaryotes. They have existed for about 3.5 billion years, from Pre-cambrian times, and played a significant role in oxygen accumulation in the Earth’s early atmosphere making it fit for the survival of aerobic life-forms. Their unique ability, the ability to fix nitrogen and carry out oxygen-evolving photosynthesis and oxygen-labile nitrogen fixation within the same organisms, has always fascinated researchers (Mitsui et al.
1986). During their long evolutionary history, cyanobacteria have been able to adapt to geochemical and climate changes as well as anthropogenic disturbances (Paerl and Otten
2013). They probably exhibit the widest range of diversity in growth habitats of all photosynthetic organisms, and have developed CO
2 concentrating mechanisms which adapt them to various environmental limitations (Badger et al.
2006). With an estimated global biomass of 3 × 10
14 g C, or 10
15 g wet biomass (Garcia-Pichel et al.
2003), quantitatively they are also some of the world’s most important organisms (Whitton
2012). Many of the species, however, remain to be discovered (Nabout et al.
2013), and cyanobacteria remain a neglected component of biodiversity research (Rejmankova et al.
2004). …