Gammaproteobacteria are widely distributed and abundant in various ecosystems such as soil, freshwater lakes and rivers, oceans and
salt lakes. For example, they constitute about 6–20% (average of 14%) of
bacterioplankton in different oceans, and they are distributed worldwide in both deep-sea and coastal sediments. In
seawater, bacterial community composition could be shaped by environmental parameters such as
phosphorus availability,
total organic carbon,
salinity, and
pH. In
soil, higher pH is correlated with higher relative abundance of
Alphaproteobacteria,
Betaproteobacteria and
Gammaproteobacteria. The relative abundance of
Betaproteobacteria and
Gammaproteobacteria is also positively correlated to the
dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentration, which is a key environmental parameter shaping bacterial community composition.
Gammaproteobacteria are also key players in the
dark carbon fixation in coastal sediments, which are the largest
carbon sink on Earth, and the majority of these bacteria have not been cultured yet. The
deep-sea hydrothermal system is one of the most extreme environments on Earth. Almost all vent-endemic animals are strongly associated with the primary production of the endo- and/or episymbiotic
chemoautotrophic microorganisms. Analyses of both the
symbiotic and free-living microbial communities in the various deep-sea hydrothermal environments have revealed a predominance in
biomass of members of the
Gammaproteobacteria.
Gammaproteobacteria have a wide diversity, metabolic versatility, and functional redundancy in the hydrothermal sediments, and they are responsible for the important organic carbon turnover and nitrogen and
sulfur cycling processes.
Anoxic hydrothermal fluids contain several reduced compounds such as
H2,
CH4, and reduced metal ions in addition to
H2S. Chemoautotrophs that
oxidize hydrogen sulfide and reduce oxygen potentially sustain the primary production in these unique ecosystems. In the last decades, it has been found that orders belonging to
Gammaproteobacteria, like
Pseudomonas,
Moraxella, are able to degrade different types of plastics, and these microbes might have a key role in plastic biodegradation. == Metabolism ==