High-temperature environments have also proven to be important sources of very useful thermostable enzymes with applications in various industrial fields, such as food and chemical synthesis industries. In addition to geothermally heated environments, such as hot springs and hydrothermal vents, arid/semiarid regions and environments subject to natural composting processes are often good targets for the application of metagenomic tools [
77]. Compost samples from Expo Park in Japan, produced from leaves and branches, are a good example of natural composting since they have been studied over a few years [
24,
42,
59,
69]. Once thermophilic composting reaches high temperatures, there is a greater predominance of microorganisms capable of degrading complex molecules, with this type of environment being a potential source of lignocellulose-degrading enzymes and, for this reason, an interesting subject of study [
78]. Several arid/semiarid regions have been explored given the typical characteristics of these environments, including deserts [
66] and also other sites—more specifically, the Turpan Basin, which represents China’s hottest place and has proven to be a valuable source of different types of highly thermostable enzymes [
57]. Hot springs and hydrothermal vents from different portions of the planet, e.g., Caldeirão hot spring in Portugal [
28], Solnechny hot spring in Russia [
46] and Solfatara-Pisciarelli hydrothermal pool in Italy [
34] have also contributed to finding robust enzymes through the construction of metagenomic libraries using DNA extracted from wet mud and/or sediments collected from these places. For all other metagenomic studies, the expression host used was
E. coli, except for the metagenomic library constructed from sediments of a hot spring in the Azores, Portugal, which used the
T. thermophilus as the host. Using this thermophilic host, Leis and co-workers intended to increase the probability of detecting genes derived from extreme environments that would encode for new thermostable biocatalysts and allow the screening of phenotypes that are not observable in
E. coli [
43].
In some studies performed from these raw resources, an additional enrichment step was performed to provide favourable growth conditions for certain microorganisms of interest, often present in small abundance, to the detriment of others [
79]. These enrichments were implemented by introducing specific substrates, such as cellulose, xylan, chitin, starch and glucose [
31,
33,
38], and even olive oil [
47], that stimulate specific microbial activities. On the other hand, culture enrichment also occurred by controlling environmental conditions, in particular the temperature, which is generally in agreement with the temperature of the sampling locations [
26].
Over the past decade, in addition to function-based metagenomic screenings, sequence-based metagenomic screenings have also been performed. Sequential metagenomics showed that the phyla that predominate high-temperature environments are
Crenarchaeota, Thaumarchaeota,
Acidobacteria and
Proteobacteria capable of mineral-based metabolism and generally associated with soil, found more specifically in sediments from hot springs and hydrothermal vents [
21,
31,
34,
36,
43].