Response and resilience of the microbial methane filter to ecosystem changes in Arctic peatlands
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25384Åpne
Dato
2022-06-30Type
Doctoral thesisDoktorgradsavhandling
Forfatter
Rainer, Edda MarieSammendrag
Climate change is a major concern in the Arctic region, as large amounts of organic carbon (C) are stored in permafrost soils and sediments. Increasing average temperatures have the potential to release that C and making it available to biologic activity. Carbon-rich, anoxic soils such as peatlands are inhabited by methanogenic archaea that can metabolize by-products of microbial C decomposition and consequently release methane (CH4). Methane oxidizing bacteria (MOB) comprise a major biological filter for CH4 in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems and thereby regulate CH4 emissions to the atmosphere. The genus Methylobacter has been detected in many CH4 rich ecosystems and several circumpolar locations. Climate change in the Arctic includes changes in both temperature and precipitation as well as ecosystem changes related to plant cover and herbivory. All of these changes have the potential to influence soil structure and soil biological processes. Thus, they are important factors controlling the soil C cycle and eventually the activity of MOB. The aim of this thesis was to investigate the ability of the Arctic biological CH4 filter to adapt to changes in vegetation, CH4 concentrations and temperature. Further, to gain insights in the resilience and resistance of the MOB community to environmental changes.
We have shown that herbivory by geese changes the soil structure and thus the vertical distribution of CH4 and oxygen (O2) concentrations in a high Arctic peatland. These differences are accompanied by changes in the potential rates of CH4 oxidation. The highest activity was detected in shallower parts of the peatland in grazed sites compared to sites protected from grazing. Different MOB communities are responsible for the CH4 oxidation, depending on the above ground grazing and these communities are composed of closely related Methylobacter OTUs. Exposing peat soils from both grazed and protected sites to increased CH4 concentrations and temperature revealed that MOB respond strongly to changing CH4 concentrations, but apparently not to temperature. The response to changing CH4 concentrations involved different members of the Methylobacter community depending on the CH4 concentration and their previous exposure to herbivory. Temperature had minor effects on the CH4 oxidation activity and the MOB community pmoA transcription in the soils. However, temperature clearly influences growth, CH4 oxidation and CO2 production in the native peat soil isolate Methylobacter tundripaludum SV96. The temperature adaptation of M. tundripaludum SV96 is modulated by fine tuning transcription and translation to achieve the optimal balance between substrate availability, growth, and energy generation at different temperatures. These findings show that identical CH4 oxidation rates can be produced from very different physiological states. This also explains how the apparent lack of temperature responses in soil MOB communities is a result of physiological acclimation.
Our results show that MOB in high Arctic peatlands and particular the genus Methylobacter is both physiologically and ecologically flexible in adapting to changes in plant cover, O2 distribution, CH4 concentrations and temperature. Thus, the MOB community comprises an efficient and resilient CH4 filter in high Arctic peat soils.
Har del(er)
Paper I: Rainer, E.M., Seppey, C.V.W., Tveit, A.T. & Svenning, M.M. (2020). Methanotroph populations and CH4 oxidation potentials in high-Arctic peat are altered by herbivory induced vegetation change. FEMS Microbiology Ecology, 96(10), fiaa140. Also available in Munin at https://hdl.handle.net/10037/19936.
Paper II: Rainer, E.M., Seppey, C.V.W., Hammer, C., Svenning, M.M. & Tveit, A.T. (2021). The Influence of Above-Ground Herbivory on the Response of Arctic Soil Methanotrophs to Increasing CH4 Concentrations and Temperatures. Microorganisms, 9(10), 2080. Also available in Munin at https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23458.
Paper III: Tveit, A.T., Söllinger, A., Rainer, E.M., Didriksen, A., Hestnes, A.G., Motleleng, L., Hellinger, H.J., Rattei, T. & Svenning, M.M. Glycogen storage and ribosome regulation controls methanotroph temperature acclimation. (Manuscript). Now published as: Thermal acclimation of methanotrophs from the genus Methylobacter. ISME Journal, 2023, available at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41396-023-01363-7.
Forlag
UiT The Arctic University of NorwayUiT Norges arktiske universitet