4.7 Article

A unique bacterial and archaeal diversity make mangrove a green production system compared to rice in wetland ecology: A metagenomic approach

期刊

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
卷 781, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146713

关键词

Bacterial diversity; GHGs emissions; Soil carbon pools; Sundarban-India; Global warming potential (GWP)

资金

  1. NRSC, Hyderabad [27/08/NF/2017HRD, EAP-248]

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Mangroves provide significant ecosystem services, but have suffered major losses in the last century due to climate change and human activities. Research in Sundarban-India revealed distinct differences between degraded mangroves and adjacent rice fields, with mangroves having lower greenhouse gas emissions and higher labile carbon buildup potential. This unique microbial feature in mangroves could be the key to their lower global warming potential and make them a cleaner production system compared to wetland rice fields.
Mangrove provides significant ecosystem services, however, 40% of tropical mangrove was lost in last century due to climate change induced sea-level rise and anthropogenic activities. Sundarban-India, the largest contiguous mangrove of the world lost 10.5% of its green during 1930-2013 which primarily converted to rice-based systems. Presently degraded mangrove and adjacent rice ecology in Sundarban-India placed side by side and create typical ecology which is distinct in nature in respect to soil physicochemical properties, carbon dynamics, and microbial diversities. We investigated the structural and functional diversities of bacteria and archaea through Illumina MiSeq metagenomic analysis using V3-V4 region of 16S rRNA gene approach that drives greenhouse gases emission and carbon-pools. Remote sensing-data base were used to select the sites for collecting the soil and gas samples. The methane and nitrous oxide emissions were lower in mangrove (-0.04 mg m(-2) h(-1) and -52.8 mu g m(-2) h(-1)) than rice (0.26 mg m(-2) h(-1) and 44.7 mu g m(-2) h(-1)) due to less availability of carbon-substrates and higher sulphate availability (85.8% more than rice). The soil labile carbon-pools were more in mangrove, but lower microbial activities were noticed due to stress conditions. A unique microbial feature indicated by higher methanotrophs: methanogens (11.2), sulphur reducing bacteria (SRB): methanogens (93.2) ratios and lower functional diversity (7.5%) in mangrove than rice. These could be the key drivers of lower global warming potential (GWP) in mangrove that make it a green production system. Therefore, labile carbon buildup potential (38%) with less GWP (63%) even in degraded-mangrove makes it a clean production system than wetland-rice that has high potential to climate change mitigation. The whole genome metagenomic analysis would be the future research priority to identify the predominant enzymatic pathways which govern the methanogenesis and methanotrophy in this system. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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