4.5 Article

Methanotroph community structure and processes in an inland river affected by natural gas macro-seeps

Journal

FEMS MICROBIOLOGY ECOLOGY
Volume 97, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/femsec/fiab130

Keywords

methane; methane oxidation; methanotroph; natural gas seep; aquatic metabolism; microbial communities

Categories

Funding

  1. Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO, Australian Government) [2017092938]
  2. Origin Energy Limited

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This study found that natural gas macro-seeps along the Condamine River in eastern Australia significantly increased methane oxidation rates and the abundance of methanotrophs in the surrounding water column, primarily influenced by methane availability and river discharge variation.
Methane availability in freshwaters is usually associated with spatial-temporal variation in methanogenesis. Unusually, however, natural gas macro-seeps occur along the Condamine River in eastern Australia which elevate ambient water-column methane concentrations more than 3,000 times. We quantified the spatial-temporal variation in methane oxidation rates and the total microbial and methanotroph community composition (through the amplification and sequencing of 16S rRNA and particulate methane monooxygenase (pmoA) genes), and the factors mediating this variation, in reaches with and without macro-seeps. Sediment methane oxidation rates were, on average, 29 times greater, and the abundance of methanotrophs significantly higher, in the vicinity of methane macro-seeps compared to non-seep sites. Methylocystis was the most abundant methanotroph group at all sites, but type lb methanotrophs showed the steepest increase in abundance at seep sites. pmoA gene analysis identified these as Glade 501, while 16S rRNA gene analysis identified these as the closely related genus Methylocaldum. Sediment methane oxidation rates and the relative abundance and composition of benthic microbial communities were primarily influenced by methane availability which was in turn related to variation in river discharge. Methane-derived carbon may be an important energy source for the aquatic food webs in reaches affected by natural gas macro-seeps.

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