Gas Metabolism Evidence in Support of the Juxtaposition of Hydrogen-Producing and Methanogenic Bacteria in Sewage Sludge and Lake Sediments

Author:

Conrad R.1,Phelps T. J.1,Zeikus J. G.1

Affiliation:

1. Max-Planck Institute fur Chemie, D-6500, Mainz, Federal Republic of Germany1; Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin 537062; and Michigan Biotechnology Institute and Departments of Biochemistry and Microbiology, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 488243

Abstract

We developed new techniques to measure dissolved H 2 and H 2 consumption kinetics in anoxic ecosystems that were not dependent on headspace measurements or gas transfer-limited experimentation. These H 2 metabolism parameters were then compared with measured methane production rates, and estimates of H 2 production and interspecies H 2 transfer were made. The H 2 pool sizes were 205 and 31 nM in sewage sludge from an anaerobic digestor and in sediments (24 m) from Lake Mendota, respectively. The H 2 turnover rate constants, as determined by using in situ pool sizes and temperatures, were 103 and 31 h −1 for sludge and sediment, respectively. The observed H 2 turnover rate accounted for only 5 to 6% of the expected H 2 -CO 2 -dependent methanogenesis in these ecosystems. Our results are in general agreement with the results reported previously and are used to support the conclusion that most of the H 2 -dependent methanogenesis in these ecosystems occurs as a consequence of direct interspecies H 2 transfer between juxtapositioned microbial associations within flocs or consortia.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference35 articles.

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5. Interrelations between sulfate-reducing and methane-producing bacteria in bottom deposits of a fresh water lake. III. Experiments with 14C-labelled substrates. Antonie van Leeuwenhoek J;Cappenberg T. E.;Microbiol. Serol.,1974

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