Porewater constituents inhibit microbially mediated greenhouse gas production (GHG) and regulate the response of soil organic matter decomposition to warming in anoxic peat from a Sphagnum-dominated bog

Author:

Song Tianze1ORCID,Liu Yutong12,Kolton Max13,Wilson Rachel M4,Keller Jason K5,Rolando Jose L1,Chanton Jeffrey P4,Kostka Joel E167

Affiliation:

1. School of Biological Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology , Atlanta, GA 30332 , United States

2. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, University Park , University Park, PA 16802 , United States

3. French Associates Institute for Agriculture and Biotechnology of Drylands, Ben-Gurion, University of the Negev , Beer Sheva, 8499000 , Israel

4. Department of Earth, Ocean & Atmospheric Science, Florida State University , Tallahassee, FL 32304 , United States

5. Schmid College of Science and Technology, Chapman University , 1 University Dr, Orange, CA 92866 , United States

6. School of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Georgia Institute of Technology , Atlanta, GA 30318 , United States

7. Center for Microbial Dynamics and Infection, Georgia Institute of Technology , Atlanta, GA 30332 , United States

Abstract

Abstract Northern peatlands store approximately one-third of terrestrial soil carbon. Climate warming is expected to stimulate the microbially mediated degradation of peat soil organic matter (SOM), leading to increasing greenhouse gas (GHG; carbon dioxide, CO2; methane, CH4) production and emission. Porewater dissolved organic matter (DOM) plays a key role in SOM decomposition; however, the mechanisms controlling SOM decomposition and its response to warming remain unclear. The temperature dependence of GHG production and microbial community dynamics were investigated in anoxic peat from a Sphagnum-dominated peatland. In this study, peat decomposition, which was quantified by GHG production and carbon substrate utilization is limited by terminal electron acceptors (TEA) and DOM, and these controls of microbially mediated SOM degradation are temperature-dependent. Elevated temperature led to a slight decrease in microbial diversity, and stimulated the growth of specific methanotrophic and syntrophic taxa. These results confirm that DOM is a major driver of decomposition in peatland soils contains inhibitory compounds, but the inhibitory effect is alleviated by warming.

Funder

Biological and Environmental Research

U.S. Department of Energy

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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