The influence of above-ground herbivory on the response of arctic soil methanotrophs to increasing ch4 concentrations and temperatures
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23458Date
2021-10-02Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Rainer, Edda Marie; Seppey, Victor William Christophe; Hammer, Caroline; Svenning, Mette Marianne; Tveit, AlexanderAbstract
Rising temperatures in the Arctic affect soil microorganisms, herbivores, and peatland
vegetation, thus directly and indirectly influencing microbial CH4 production. It is not currently
known how methanotrophs in Arctic peat respond to combined changes in temperature, CH4 concentration, and vegetation. We studied methanotroph responses to temperature and CH4 concentration
in peat exposed to herbivory and protected by exclosures. The methanotroph activity was assessed
by CH4 oxidation rate measurements using peat soil microcosms and a pure culture of Methylobacter
tundripaludum SV96, qPCR, and sequencing of pmoA transcripts. Elevated CH4 concentrations led
to higher CH4 oxidation rates both in grazed and exclosed peat soils, but the strongest response
was observed in grazed peat soils. Furthermore, the relative transcriptional activities of different
methanotroph community members were affected by the CH4 concentrations. While transcriptional
responses to low CH4 concentrations were more prevalent in grazed peat soils, responses to high CH4
concentrations were more prevalent in exclosed peat soils. We observed no significant methanotroph
responses to increasing temperatures. We conclude that methanotroph communities in these peat
soils respond to changes in the CH4 concentration depending on their previous exposure to grazing.
This “conditioning” influences which strains will thrive and, therefore, determines the function of
the methanotroph community.
Is part of
Rainer, E.M. (2022). Response and resilience of the microbial methane filter to ecosystem changes in Arctic peatlands. (Doctoral thesis). https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25384.Publisher
MDPICitation
Rainer, Seppey CVW, Hammer, Svenning, Tveit. The influence of above-ground herbivory on the response of arctic soil methanotrophs to increasing CH4 concentrations and temperatures. Microorganisms. 2021;9(10)Metadata
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