Biogeography of microbial communities in high-latitude ecosystems: Contrasting drivers for methanogens, methanotrophs and global prokaryotes
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/31990Dato
2023-10-27Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Forfatter
Seppey, Victor William Christophe; Cabrol, Léa; Thalasso, Frederic; Gandois, Laure; Lavergne, Céline; Martinez-Cruz, Karla; Sepulveda-Jauregui, Armando; Aguilar-Muñoz, Polette; Astorga-España, María Soledad; Chamy, Rolando; Dellagnezze, Bruna Martins; Etchebehere, Claudia; Fochesatto, Gilberto J.; Gerardo-Nieto, Oscar; Mansilla, Andrés; Murray, Alison; Sweetlove, Maxime; Tananaev, Nikita; Teisserenc, Roman; Tveit, Alexander Tøsdal; Van de Putte, Anton; Svenning, Mette Marianne; Barret, MaialenSammendrag
Methane-cycling is becoming more important in high-latitude ecosystems as
global warming makes permafrost organic carbon increasingly available.
We explored 387 samples from three high-latitudes regions (Siberia, Alaska
and Patagonia) focusing on mineral/organic soils (wetlands, peatlands forest), lake/pond sediment and water. Physicochemical, climatic and geographic variables were integrated with 16S rDNA amplicon sequences to
determine the structure of the overall microbial communities and of specific
methanogenic and methanotrophic guilds. Physicochemistry (especially pH)
explained the largest proportion of variation in guild composition, confirming
species sorting (i.e., environmental filtering) as a key mechanism in microbial assembly. Geographic distance impacted more strongly beta diversity
for (i) methanogens and methanotrophs than the overall prokaryotes and,
(ii) the sediment habitat, suggesting that dispersal limitation contributed to
shape the communities of methane-cycling microorganisms. Bioindicator
taxa characterising different ecological niches (i.e., specific combinations of
geographic, climatic and physicochemical variables) were identified,
highlighting the importance of Methanoregula as generalist methanogens.
Methylocystis and Methylocapsa were key methanotrophs in low pH niches
while Methylobacter and Methylomonadaceae in neutral environments. This
work gives insight into the present and projected distribution of methanecycling microbes at high latitudes under climate change predictions, which
is crucial for constraining their impact on greenhouse gas budgets.
Forlag
WileySitering
Seppey, Cabrol, Thalasso, Gandois, Lavergne, Martinez-Cruz, Sepulveda-Jauregui, Aguilar-Muñoz, Astorga-España, Chamy, Dellagnezze, Etchebehere, Fochesatto, Gerardo-Nieto, Mansilla, Murray, Sweetlove, Tananaev, Teisserenc, Tveit, Van de Putte, Svenning, Barret. Biogeography of microbial communities in high-latitude ecosystems: Contrasting drivers for methanogens, methanotrophs and global prokaryotes. Environmental Microbiology. 2023Metadata
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