Experimental erosion of microbial diversity decreases soil CH4 consumption rates

Author:

Schnyder Elvira1,Bodelier Paul L. E.2,Hartmann Martin3,Henneberger Ruth4,Niklaus Pascal A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Evolutionary Biology and Environmental Studies University of Zürich Zürich Switzerland

2. Department of Microbial Ecology Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO‐KNAW) Wageningen The Netherlands

3. Department of Environmental Systems Science Institute of Agricultural Sciences, ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

4. Institute of Molecular Health Science ETH Zürich Zürich Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBiodiversity‐ecosystem functioning (BEF) experiments have predominantly focused on communities of higher organisms, in particular plants, with comparably little known to date about the relevance of biodiversity for microbially driven biogeochemical processes. Methanotrophic bacteria play a key role in Earth's methane (CH4) cycle by removing atmospheric CH4 and reducing emissions from methanogenesis in wetlands and landfills. Here, we used a dilution‐to‐extinction approach to simulate diversity loss in a methanotrophic landfill cover soil community. Replicate samples were diluted 101–107‐fold, preincubated under a high CH4 atmosphere for microbial communities to recover to comparable size, and then incubated for 86 days at constant or diurnally cycling temperature. We hypothesize that (1) CH4 consumption decreases as methanotrophic diversity is lost, and (2) this effect is more pronounced under variable temperatures. Net CH4 consumption was determined by gas chromatography. Microbial community composition was determined by DNA extraction and sequencing of amplicons specific to methanotrophs and bacteria (pmoA and 16S gene fragments). The richness of operational taxonomic units (OTU) of methanotrophic and nonmethanotrophic bacteria decreased approximately linearly with log‐dilution. CH4 consumption decreased with the number of OTUs lost, independent of community size. These effects were independent of temperature cycling. The diversity effects we found occured in relatively diverse communities, challenging the notion of high functional redundancy mediating high resistance to diversity erosion in natural microbial systems. The effects also resemble the ones for higher organisms, suggesting that BEF relationships are universal across taxa and spatial scales.

Funder

Schweizerischer Nationalfonds zur Förderung der Wissenschaftlichen Forschung

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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