top of page

CONTINENTAL SUBSURFACE HABITATS
Groundwater

IMG_0188.jpeg
67185609_472835023303339_2163748014840086528_n.jpg

Microbial communities in subsurface groundwater

Projects led by Karine Villeneuve

                    

Collaboration: Prof. Marie Larocque (UQAM )

                  

Groult-2022.png
Villeuneuve-2022.png
Screenshot, 2024-06-28 at 12.25.25.png
67557599_1128295774026652_6433974100191870976_n copy.jpg

Microbial communities in discharge surface areas​

Screenshot, 2024-06-28 at 12.27.25.png

The continental subsurface is composed of sediment and a rock matrix often deeper. In the saturated zone, water flows from the surface in recharge zones, into the subsurface at aquifer level (groundwater), then rises to the surface at discharge or resurgent zones. In underground habitats, there are planktonic microorganisms that live in water, sessile organisms that live attached to particles or on rock surfaces, and endolithic organisms that live in rock pores. These populations colonize both saturated and unsaturated areas in subsurface habitats, ranging from a few meters (shallow) to a few kilometers (deep).

Thus, we are studying the microbial communities in groundwater (Laurentides and Lanaudière regions, Quebec), sediments and rocks of the superficial subsurface (<50m), in the groundwater surface discharge zones.

Screenshot 2021-10-08 at 11.54.04.png
Screenshot 2021-10-08 at 11.54.04.png
Screenshot 2021-10-08 at 11.54.04.png
bottom of page