Affiliation:
1. Department of Chemical and Environmental Engineering, School of Engineering and Applied Science, Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut, USA
2. Yale School of the Environment, Yale University , New Haven, Connecticut, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The emission of methane from wetlands is spatially heterogeneous, as concurrently measured surface fluxes can vary by orders of magnitude within the span of a few meters. Despite extensive study and the climatic significance of these emissions, it remains unclear what drives large, within-site variations. While geophysical factors (e.g., soil temperature) are known to correlate with methane (CH
4
) flux, measurable variance in these parameters often declines as spatial and temporal scales become finer. As methane emitted from wetlands is the direct, net product of microbial metabolisms which both produce and degrade CH
4
, it stands to reason that characterizing the spatial variability of microbial communities within a wetland—both horizontally and vertically—may help explain observed variances in flux. To that end, we surveyed microbial communities to a depth of 1 m across an ombrotrophic peat bog in Maine, USA using amplicon sequencing and gene expression techniques. Surface methane fluxes and geophysical factors were concurrently measured. Across the first meter of peat at the site, we observed significant changes in the abundance and composition of methanogenic taxa at every depth sampled, with variance in methanogen abundance explaining 70% of flux heterogeneity at a subset of plots. Among measured environmental factors, only peat depth emerged as correlated with flux, and had significant impact on the abundance and composition of methane-cycling communities. These conclusions suggest that a heightened awareness of how microbial communities are structured and spatially distributed within wetlands could offer improved insights into predicting CH
4
flux dynamics.
IMPORTANCE
Globally, wetlands are one of the largest sources of methane (CH
4
), a greenhouse gas with a warming impact significantly greater than CO
2
. Methane produced in wetlands is the byproduct of a group of microorganisms which convert organic carbon into CH
4
. Despite our knowledge of how this process works, it is still unclear what drives dramatic, localized (<10 m) variance in emission rates from the surface of wetlands. While environmental conditions, like soil temperature or water table depth, correlate with methane flux when variance in these factors is large (e.g., spring vs fall), the explanatory power of these variables decline when spatial and temporal scales become smaller. As methane fluxes are the direct product of microbial activity, we profiled how the microbial community varied, both horizontally and vertically, across a peat bog in Maine, USA, finding that variance in microbial communities was likely contributing to much of the observed variance in flux.
Funder
DOD | National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate
Yale Center for Natural Carbon Capture
Yale Planetary Solutions Project
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Cell Biology,Microbiology (medical),Genetics,General Immunology and Microbiology,Ecology,Physiology