Chemoautotrophic sulphur oxidizers dominate microbial necromass carbon formation in coastal blue carbon ecosystems

Author:

Yu Xiaoli1ORCID,Qian Lu1ORCID,Tu Qichao2ORCID,Peng Yisheng1ORCID,Wang Cheng1ORCID,Wu Daoming3ORCID,He Ziying4,Shu Longfei1ORCID,He Qiang5ORCID,Tian Yun6,Yin Kedong4,Wang Shanquan1ORCID,Yan Qingyun14ORCID,Zhong Qiuping17,He Zhili14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Environmental Microbiomics Research Center, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Zhuhai), State Key Laboratory for Biocontrol Sun Yat‐Sen University Guangzhou China

2. Institute of Marine Science and Technology Shandong University Qingdao China

3. College of Forestry & Landscape Architecture South China Agricultural University Guangzhou China

4. School of Marine Science Sun Yat‐Sen University Zhuhai China

5. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering The University of Tennessee Knoxville Tennessee USA

6. Key Laboratory of the Ministry of Education for Coastal and Wetland Ecosystems, School of Life Sciences Xiamen University Xiamen China

7. Nansha Experimental School Affiliated to the Middle School Attached to Guangzhou University Guangzhou China

Abstract

Abstract Coastal blue carbon (C) ecosystems are recognized as efficient natural C sinks and play key roles in mitigating global climate change. Microbially driven C, nitrogen (N) and sulphur (S) cycles are crucial for ecosystem functioning, but how microorganisms drive C sink formation and C sequestration in coastal sediments remains unclear. In this study, we conducted a comprehensive analysis of amino sugars, C, N and S cycling genes/pathways and their associated taxa in coastal sediments of native (Cyperus malaccensis and Kandelia obovata) and alien (Spartina alterniflora and Sonneratia apetala) vegetation. Compared to the alien‐vegetated coastal sediment, the native‐vegetated coastal sediment had significantly (p < 0.05) higher microbial necromass C and higher functional potentials of chemoautotrophic C fixation, C degradation, methane cycling, N2 fixation, S oxidation and sulphate reduction. Also, our analysis of coastal sediment microbiomes showed that S oxidation could be coupled with C fixation and/or nitrate/nitrite reduction. S oxidation, C degradation and C fixation were found to be key functional pathways for predicting sediment microbial necromass C. Additionally, the sulphur‐oxidizing Burkholderiales metagenome‐assembled genomes (MAGs) were a key functional group that dominated chemoautotrophic C fixation in coastal sediments. These results suggested that chemoautotrophic S oxidizers, in particular Burkholderiales with a novel lineage, might be the key microbial group that dominates microbial necromass C formation in coastal sediments through microbial anabolism (C fixation);the coupling of microbially driven C, N and S cycling processes; and the deposition of microbially derived C. This study provides novel insights into the importance of chemoautotrophic S oxidizers for microbial necromass formation and shed new light on the microbial mechanism of C sink formation in coastal ecosystems, which also has important implications for enhancing C sequestration in coastal wetlands. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Funder

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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