Hot springs represent unique geothermal ecosystems where extreme physicochemical conditions intersect with remarkable microbial diversity and metabolic innovation. These natural laboratories harbor specialized communities of thermophilic and hyperthermophilic microorganisms that have evolved exceptional adaptations to elevated temperatures, extreme pH, and high salinity. This review synthesizes current understanding of hot spring systems as multifunctional natural resources, examining their roles in fundamental microbiology, biotechnology, and sustainable development. We explore the ecological principles governing microbial community assembly, the taxonomic and functional diversity of prokaryotic and eukaryotic microorganisms, and the genomic mechanisms underlying thermophilic adaptation. Hot springs yield enzymes revolutionizing molecular biology and industrial catalysis, bioactive metabolites with pharmaceutical potential, and novel bioremediation capabilities including plastic degradation. Beyond biological significance, these systems contain valuable minerals and rare earth elements, supporting an emerging bioeconomy integrating wellness tourism, bioprospecting, and sustainable resource extraction. However, critical knowledge gaps remain regarding viral ecology, horizontal gene transfer, eukaryotic diversity, and climate change impacts. We emphasize that hot springs merit renewed interdisciplinary attention as model systems for understanding extremophile physiology, early life evolution, and the development of nature-based biotechnological solutions. Realizing their full potential requires balanced management strategies that preserve ecosystem integrity while enabling responsible utilization of these irreplaceable geobiological resources.
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I. Nengah Wirajana
Nilam Vaghamshi
Ni Putu Ariantari
Bacteria
Udayana University
Veer Narmad South Gujarat University
Junagadh Agricultural University
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Wirajana et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6990113f2ccff479cfe57b8a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/bacteria5010012
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