4.7 Article

Effect of temperature on the structure and activity of a methanogenic archaeal community during rice straw decomposition

Journal

SOIL BIOLOGY & BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 81, Issue -, Pages 17-27

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2014.10.031

Keywords

CH4 production; Methanogenic archaeal community; mcrA gene and transcript; Temperature effects; Rice field soil; Straw degradation

Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program of China [2011CB100505]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [41101239]
  3. Beijing Higher Education Young Elite Teacher Project [YETP0311]
  4. Netherlands Genomics Initiative via the Netherlands Consortium for Systems Biology

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In recent years, the rice fields in Sanjiang Plain of Northeast China have drawn more and more attention because of the unique high-latitude location and the important contributions to rice production and methane emission. In the present study, a rice field soil in Sanjiang Plain was anaerobically incubated in presence and absence of rice straw at three temperatures (10 degrees C, 30 degrees C and 45 degrees C). The community structure and activity dynamics of methanogenic archaea were investigated by the terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses in combination with cloning and sequencing of mcrA genes and transcripts and archaeal 16S rRNA genes. We found rice straw addition significantly shortened the lag phase of methanogenesis and enhanced the production of CH4 and the accumulation of methanogenic precursors (CO2, H-2 and acetate). The T-RFLP analysis of mcrA gene revealed that structure of methanogenic archaeal community was relatively stable during the anoxic incubation. By contrast, analysis at the transcript level showed a highly dynamic composition of the active methanogens. In the beginning and early stages of incubation, Methanosarcinaceae actively utilized the accumulated acetate and H-2/CO2 for CH4 production. Then the different methanogenic community developed along with the incubation time, and each representative methanogen group became predominant in different temperatures and treatments. At 10 degrees C, Methanobacteriales became more abundant in the soil without straw, while Methanosarcinaceae dominated in the soil with straw. The acetoclastic Methanosaetaceae, in particular, appeared to be active at 30 degrees C, probably due to the low concentration of acetate. High temperature of 45 degrees C significantly favored the hydrogenotrophic methanogens, with the increasing abundance of Methanobacteriales early and then the Methanocellales in the later stages. (C) 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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