4.8 Article

The role of oxygen in stimulating methane production in wetlands

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 22, Pages 5831-5847

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15831

Keywords

carbon mitigation; carbon-climate feedback; climate change; peatland microbiome; soil microbial carbon cycling; soil redox dynamics; wetland management; wetland methane

Funding

  1. Carbon Mitigation Initiative at Princeton University
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship [DGE 1842213]
  3. National Science Foundation Award [CHE-1610021]
  4. National Science Foundation - Earth Sciences [EAR-1128799]
  5. Department of Energy, Geosciences [DE-FG02-94ER14466]
  6. DOE Office of Science [DE-SC0012704, DE-AC02-06CH11357]
  7. GeoSoilEnviroCARS

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Research has shown that exposure of peat to oxygen can significantly increase methane production in subsequent anoxic conditions, with yields up to 2000 times higher compared to peat without oxygen exposure. Furthermore, specific functional shifts in the peat microbiome underlie the enhancement of methane production by oxygen in acidic, Sphagnum-rich wetland soils.
Methane (CH4), a potent greenhouse gas, is the second most important greenhouse gas contributor to climate change after carbon dioxide (CO2). The biological emissions of CH4 from wetlands are a major uncertainty in CH4 budgets. Microbial methanogenesis by Archaea is an anaerobic process accounting for most biological CH4 production in nature, yet recent observations indicate that large emissions can originate from oxygenated or frequently oxygenated wetland soil layers. To determine how oxygen (O-2) can stimulate CH4 emissions, we used incubations of Sphagnum peat to demonstrate that the temporary exposure of peat to O-2 can increase CH4 yields up to 2000-fold during subsequent anoxic conditions relative to peat without O-2 exposure. Geochemical (including ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry, X-ray absorbance spectroscopy) and microbiome (16S rDNA amplicons, metagenomics) analyses of peat showed that higher CH4 yields of redox-oscillated peat were due to functional shifts in the peat microbiome arising during redox oscillation that enhanced peat carbon (C) degradation. Novosphingobium species with O-2-dependent aromatic oxygenase genes increased greatly in relative abundance during the oxygenation period in redox-oscillated peat compared to anoxic controls. Acidobacteria species were particularly important for anaerobic processing of peat C, including in the production of methanogenic substrates H-2 and CO2. Higher CO2 production during the anoxic phase of redox-oscillated peat stimulated hydrogenotrophic CH4 production by Methanobacterium species. The persistence of reduced iron (Fe(II)) during prolonged oxygenation in redox-oscillated peat may further enhance C degradation through abiotic mechanisms (e.g., Fenton reactions). The results indicate that specific functional shifts in the peat microbiome underlie O-2 enhancement of CH4 production in acidic, Sphagnum-rich wetland soils. They also imply that understanding microbial dynamics spanning temporal and spatial redox transitions in peatlands is critical for constraining CH4 budgets; predicting feedbacks between climate change, hydrologic variability, and wetland CH4 emissions; and guiding wetland C management strategies.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.8
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available