Depth heterogeneity of lignin-degrading microbiome and organic carbon processing in mangrove sediments

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Abstract

Mangrove ecosystems are globally recognized for their blue carbon (C) sequestration capacity. Lignocellulosic detritus constitutes the primary C input to mangrove sediments, but the microbial processes involved in its bioprocessing remain unclear. Using lignocellulosic analysis and metagenomic sequencing across five 100-cm sediment cores, we found a high proportion of lignin (95.0–97.7%) within sediments’ lignocellulosic detritus, with a small fraction of lignin-degrading genes (1.24–1.98%) of lignin-degrading genes within the carbohydrate-active enzyme coding genes. Depth stratification was observed in genes and microbial communities involved in lignin depolymerization and mineralization of lignin monomer derivatives. Further microbe-centered analyses of biomass production rates and adaptive metabolism revealed diminished microbial C use efficiency potential and augmented “enzyme latch” with increasing sediment depths. These findings enhance our understanding of sedimentary organic C cycling and storage in coastal blue C ecosystems.

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Ding, J., Liu, F., Zeng, J., Gu, H., Huang, J., Wu, B., … Wang, C. (2025). Depth heterogeneity of lignin-degrading microbiome and organic carbon processing in mangrove sediments. Npj Biofilms and Microbiomes, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41522-024-00638-x

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