What are stromatolites?
Stromatolites are rock-like structures of multi-layered sheets of microorganisms (microbial mats) that form in limestone.
Stromatolites generally form from the trapping and binding of particles by microorganisms e.g. algae and bacteria, and grow upward to get light from photosynthesis. Stromatolites provide scientists with some of the oldest records of early life on earth found from fossil remnants dating back to more than 3.5 billion years ago.
Name the organism that forms Stromatolites and how they form them:
Cyanobacteria form’s Stromatolites from the Cyanobacteria forming ‘colonies’, trapping sediments with their sticky surface. The sediment, now trapped, reacts with calcium carbonate in the water which creates limestone. The limestone starts to build up slowly; i.e. it can take a Stromatolite, approximately, 100 years to grow five cm until it reaches its full height.
Diagram of Stromatolite formation:
Continued:
The main features of the environment occupied by Stromalite Cyanobacteria
Stromatolite Cyanobacteria, due to being photosynthetic requires the water to be shallow, so they can reach the bottom of the ‘water column’ and to have water currents to provide them with the right amount of silt for the stromatolites to cement the silt with the limestone they get from the water, without being overwhelmed by the silt. Stromatolites can exist in places very few life forms can tolerate. For example, they can be found today in hyper-saline lakes and aquatic environments where the salt level is so high, it stops most other life using them.
The role of Stromatolite bacteria in its environment
Stromatolites are able to make their own food through the process of photosynthesis, using chlorophyll. They absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, using the energy retained to build it into energy containing sugars, while they release oxygen. Millions of years ago, the photosynthesis carried out by
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