4.6 Article

Methanogen activity and microbial diversity in Gulf of Cadiz mud volcano sediments

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1157337

Keywords

methanogens; marine sediments; biogeochemical cycles; mud volcanoes; Archaea; anaerobic methane oxidation; Bacteria

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This study analyzed the microbial diversity, geochemistry, and methanogenic activity of mud volcanoes in the Gulf of Cadiz. The results showed variable prokaryotic populations and activities, influenced by the geochemical heterogeneity of the sediments. Methane production from methyl compounds was higher than from other substrates, and only methylotrophic methanogenesis was observed in all the analyzed mud volcanoes. Further research is needed to determine the full contribution of these mud volcanoes to the global methane and carbon cycles.
The Gulf of Cadiz is a tectonically active continental margin with over sixty mud volcanoes (MV) documented, some associated with active methane (CH4) seepage. However, the role of prokaryotes in influencing this CH4 release is largely unknown. In two expeditions (MSM1-3 and JC10) seven Gulf of Cadiz MVs (Porto, Bonjardim, Carlos Ribeiro, Captain Arutyunov, Darwin, Meknes, and Mercator) were analyzed for microbial diversity, geochemistry, and methanogenic activity, plus substrate amended slurries also measured potential methanogenesis and anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM). Prokaryotic populations and activities were variable in these MV sediments reflecting the geochemical heterogeneity within and between them. There were also marked differences between many MV and their reference sites. Overall direct cell numbers below the SMTZ (0.2-0.5 mbsf) were much lower than the general global depth distribution and equivalent to cell numbers from below 100 mbsf. Methanogenesis from methyl compounds, especially methylamine, were much higher than the usually dominant substrates H-2/CO2 or acetate. Also, CH4 production occurred in 50% of methylated substrate slurries and only methylotrophic CH4 production occurred at all seven MV sites. These slurries were dominated by Methanococcoides methanogens (resulting in pure cultures), and prokaryotes found in other MV sediments. AOM occurred in some slurries, particularly, those from Captain Arutyunov, Mercator and Carlos Ribeiro MVs. Archaeal diversity at MV sites showed the presence of both methanogens and ANME (Methanosarcinales, Methanococcoides, and ANME-1) related sequences, and bacterial diversity was higher than archaeal diversity, dominated by members of the Atribacterota, Chloroflexota, Pseudomonadota, Planctomycetota, Bacillota, and Ca. Aminicenantes. Further work is essential to determine the full contribution of Gulf of Cadiz mud volcanoes to the global methane and carbon cycles.

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