Methane uptake and diversity of methanotrophic bacteria was investigated across six hydrologically connected wetlands in a mountainous forest landscape upstream of lake Langtjern, southern Norway. From floodplain through shrubs, forest and sedges to a Sphagnum covered site, growing season CH4 production was insufficiently consumed to balance release into the atmosphere. Emission increased by soil moisture ranging 0.6–6.8 mg CH4 m−2 h−1. Top soils of all sites consumed CH4 including at the lowest 78 ppmv CH4 supplied, thus potentially oxidizing 17–51 nmol CH4 g−1 dw h−1, with highest Vmax 440 nmol g−1 dw h−1 under Sphagnum and lowest Km 559 nM under hummocked Carex. Nine genera and several less understood type I and type II methanotrophs were detected by the key functional gene pmoA involved in methane oxidation. Microarray signal intensities from all sites revealed Methylococcus, the affiliated Lake Washington cluster, Methylocaldum, a Japanese rice cluster, Methylosinus, Methylocystis and the affiliated Peat264 cluster. Notably enriched by site was a floodplain Methylomonas and a Methylocapsa-affiliated watershed cluster in the Sphagnum site. The climate sensitive water table was shown to be a strong controlling factor highlighting its link with the CH4 cycle in elevated wetlands.
CITATION STYLE
Jensen, S., Siljanen, H. M. P., & Dörsch, P. (2023). Activity and abundance of methanotrophic bacteria in a northern mountainous gradient of wetlands. Environmental Microbiology Reports, 15(3), 206–215. https://doi.org/10.1111/1758-2229.13137
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