Interdisciplinary PhD opportunity in geobiology (M/F)

Updated: 14 days ago
Location: Gif sur Yvette, LE DE FRANCE
Job Type: FullTime
Deadline: 23 May 2024

3 May 2024
Job Information
Organisation/Company

CNRS
Department

Écologie, systématique et évolution
Research Field

Biological sciences
Environmental science
Researcher Profile

First Stage Researcher (R1)
Country

France
Application Deadline

23 May 2024 - 23:59 (UTC)
Type of Contract

Temporary
Job Status

Full-time
Hours Per Week

35
Offer Starting Date

1 Oct 2024
Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme?

Not funded by an EU programme
Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure?

No

Offer Description

This PhD is funded by the Interdisciplinary Mission of the CNRS (MITI 80Prime). It involves two teams from two laboratories linked to the Biology and Ecology-Environment as well as the Physics and Earth Sciences CNRS institutes. The teams of the two co-supervisors, DEEM - Diversity, Ecology and Evolution of Microbes (http://www.deemteam.fr/fr/ ) and BIOMIN - Biomineralogy: history, mechanisms and applications (https://impmc.sorbonne-universite.fr/en/research_teams/biomin-biominera… ), maintain a long-term collaboration.

Multiscale analysis of microbial rocks from the Altiplano (Andean cordillera, Chile): structure and function of microbial communities, mineralization processes and carbon storage potential

Interdisciplinary co-supervision: Purificación López-García1 and Karim Benzerara2
1 ESE – Ecologie, Systématique, Evolution, UMR 8079, Université Paris-Saclay,91190 Gif-sur-Yvette
2 IMPMC – Institut de Minéralogie, Physique de Matériaux et Cosmochimie, UMR 7590, Sorbonne Université, Paris

Summary: Microbialites are organosedimentary structures formed by microbial communities. These mineralizing microbial mats, often laminated (stromatolites), are easily preserved in the fossil record and bear witness to the occurrence of phototrophic microbial communities on Earth since ~3.5 Ga. Microbialites still form today, notably in lacustrine environments of particular hydrochemistry often linked to evaporitic processes (1, 2). Their formation could be favored by climate change and/or impacted by human activities linked to, e.g. the mining industry (3). Microbialites fix CO2 in organic and mineral form by their photosynthetic activity and favoring carbonate precipitation. They can thus play a non-negligible role in the C cycle in the context of global climate change, notably under the increasing desertification of large continental areas enhancing evaporitic processes. Nonetheless, the mechanisms of microbialite formation are not well understood and a comparison of the involved processes along evaporitic gradients is needed.
The Chilean Andean Altiplano (~4,000 m altitude) hosts a series of salt-flats (salares) displaying different salinities as a consequence of strong evaporitic processes in the Atacama Desert area. Several of these salares harbor modern microbialites, but most of them have not been studied. During recent field trips to the Chilean Altiplano (collaboration with the university of Antofagasta), we sampled 24 salares along a transect of 1,100 km, some of them under geothermal influence linked to the volcanic activity of the region. Around one fourth of these systems harbor microbialites of different morphologies and textures that have never been studied. In this project, we propose to combine metabarcoding and/or metagenomic analyses of microbial diversity with mineralogy analyses and imaging at macro-, micro- and nanoscale to answer the following questions:

i) What is the composition of microbial communities associated to these stromatolites and what are the metabolic functions favoring the mineral precipitation and, accordingly, the formation of these biosedimentary structures?

ii) What type of mineral-microbe interactions exist in the local hydrochemical contest and what are the biomineralization conditions leading to microbialite formation along the evaporitic gradients of the Altiplano?

iii) What traces of microbial activity and environmental conditions are registered at micro- and mesoscale?

By answering to these questions, we hope to establish models of stromatolite formation as a function of the hydrochemical and evaporitic context of the Altiplano salares, with implication to understand the lacustrine paleoenvironments of the region and predict the future evolution of these systems in the framework of climate change and the overexploitation and desiccation of the salares for the sake of lithium extraction.

Candidate profile: The candidate should be familiar with broad aspects of microbial diversity, ecology and evolution, as well as geosciences. Being familiar with molecular approaches to characterize microbial diversity (metabarcoding, metagenomics) and/or analytical and high-resolution microscopy approaches to study mineralogy and geochemistry will be highly appreciated.

Keywords: Stromatolite, metabarcoding, metagenomics, biosignatures, geomicrobiology, paleoenvironment, C sequestration, astrobiology


Requirements
Research Field
Biological sciences
Education Level
Master Degree or equivalent

Research Field
Environmental science
Education Level
Master Degree or equivalent

Languages
FRENCH
Level
Basic

Research Field
Biological sciences
Years of Research Experience
None

Research Field
Environmental science
Years of Research Experience
None

Additional Information
Additional comments

Program MITI 80PRime


Website for additional job details

https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Offres/Doctorant/UMR8079-PURLOP-002/Default.aspx

Work Location(s)
Number of offers available
1
Company/Institute
Écologie, systématique et évolution
Country
France
City
GIF SUR YVETTE
Geofield


Where to apply
Website

https://emploi.cnrs.fr/Candidat/Offre/UMR8079-PURLOP-002/Candidater.aspx

Contact
City

GIF SUR YVETTE
Website

http://www.ese.u-psud.fr/index.html

STATUS: EXPIRED

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