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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Microbiol.

Sec. Microbiological Chemistry and Geomicrobiology

Microbial and Geochemical Architecture of an Active Scotian Slope Cold Seep

Provisionally accepted
Elish  RedshawElish Redshaw1Gamra  OueslatiGamra Oueslati1Unyime  UmohUnyime Umoh1Gregory  Todd VenturaGregory Todd Ventura2*patricia  granadospatricia granados1Narges  AhangarianNarges Ahangarian1
  • 1Saint Mary's University, Halifax, Canada
  • 2Saint Mary's University, Halifax Regional Municipality, Canada

The final, formatted version of the article will be published soon.

Deep marine cold seeps occurring along the seabed of continental margins are identified by the oasis-like ecosystems that are largely fueled by the chemical energy of the venting fluids. Seep site 2A-1, situated at ~2500 m water depth on the Scotian Slope of the North Atlantic was discovered in 2021. The seep hosts a large mussel encrusted, carbonate mound with biogenic methane bubbling up from a single vent. The emitted biogenic methane is primarily sourced from ~1 km below the seafloor within the basin bedrock that resides directly above the crest of an underlying salt diapir. A 600-m long transect composed of six push cores was collected across the seep structure. Downcore porewater ions and lipidomic profiles of twenty-four predominantly archaeal in origin lipid classes were tentatively identified and quantified across the transect. The resolved lipidomes comprised of intact polar lipids, core lipids, core lipid degradation products, and photosynthetic pigments. These data were compiled as two-dimensional heatmaps to spatially examine vertical and lateral changes in the subsurface geochemical and microbiological architecture of the seep. Microbially mediated metabolic zones of elevated heterotrophy, denitrification, microbial sulfate reduction, and anaerobic methane oxidation were then mapped across the seep structure based on an integrated analysis of porewater geochemistry, bulk organic matter and its carbon isotope compositions, lipidomic diversity and biomarker proxy patterns. Increased lipidomic diversity is shown to exist within the seep particularly at boundaries of high lateral geochemical gradients. Biomarker lipid proxies and porewater gradient changes indicate a microbial community dominated by ANME-1 and -2/-3 archaea that is mixed with, but also surrounded by, an envelope of microbial sulfate reduction. Spatial changes in the stratified system highlight the complex interplay of micro- and macro-seepage and provide insights into the seep’s evolution and impact on microbial dynamics across the carbonate structure.

Keywords: ANME, Archaea, biomarker, cold seep, Methane, Porewater, salt diapir, Scotian Slope

Received: 19 Sep 2025; Accepted: 20 Jan 2026.

Copyright: © 2026 Redshaw, Oueslati, Umoh, Todd Ventura, granados and Ahangarian. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

* Correspondence: Gregory Todd Ventura

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