4.7 Article

Salinity Affects the Composition of the Aerobic Methanotroph Community in Alkaline Lake Sediments from the Tibetan Plateau

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 73, Issue 1, Pages 101-110

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-016-0879-5

Keywords

Aerobic methanotrophs; High-altitude lake; Methylomicrobium; Salinity; Tibetan Plateau

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41425004, 41401075]
  2. Open Research Fund of Key Laboratory of Tibetan Environmental Changes and Land Surface Processes, CAS [TEL201603]
  3. NSF of Jiangsu Province [BK20140923]
  4. PAPD of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions

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Lakes are widely distributed on the Tibetan Plateau, which plays an important role in natural methane emission. Aerobic methanotrophs in lake sediments reduce the amount of methane released into the atmosphere. However, no study to date has analyzed the methanotroph community composition and their driving factors in sediments of these high-altitude lakes (> 4000 m). To provide new insights on this aspect, the abundance and composition in the sediments of six high-altitude alkaline lakes (including both freshwater and saline lakes) on the Tibetan Plateau were studied. The quantitative PCR, terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism, and 454-pyrosequencing methods were used to target the pmoA genes. The pmoA gene copies ranged 10(4)-10(6) per gram fresh sediment. Type I methanotrophs predominated in Tibetan lake sediments, with Methylobacter and uncultivated type Ib methanotrophs being dominant in freshwater lakes and Methylomicrobium in saline lakes. Combining the pmoA-pyrosequencing data from Tibetan lakes with other published pmoA-sequencing data from lake sediments of other regions, a significant salinity and alkalinity effect (P = 0.001) was detected, especially salinity, which explained similar to 25% of methanotroph community variability. The main effect was Methylomicrobium being dominant (up to 100%) in saline lakes only. In freshwater lakes, however, methanotroph composition was relatively diverse, including Methylobacter, Methylocystis, and uncultured type Ib clusters. This study provides the first methanotroph data for high-altitude lake sediments (> 4000 m) and shows that salinity is a driving factor for the community composition of aerobic methanotrophs.

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