Detectable land use impact on methanotrophs and methanogens in kettle hole sediments but not on net methane production potentials
Danica Kynast, Florian Reverey, Lars Ganzert, Hans-Peter Grossart, Gunnar Lischeid, Steffen Kolb

TL;DR
Land use around small freshwater systems affects methane-related microbes but not methane production rates.
Contribution
Shows land use impacts microbial communities but not methane output in kettle hole sediments.
Findings
Agricultural land use increases methanotroph and methanogen abundances.
Microbial community structure is strongly influenced by land use type.
Net methane production rates do not differ significantly by land use.
Abstract
Kettle holes (KHs) are dynamic freshwater systems and potential sources of the greenhouse gas methane. Due to their small size (<1 hectare), KHs are subject to inorganic and organic matter input from their terrestrial surroundings, governed by land use. Matter inputs include inorganic solutes that are alternative electron acceptors and impact on methanotrophs and methanogens. Thus, they might affect methane net production. We sampled 10 kettle hole sediments embedded in landscapes with either agricultural or forest land use and determined their (i) potential net methane production rates, (ii) the composition of their microbial communities, and (iii) physicochemical soil parameters. Potential net methane production did not significantly differ by land use type but between single KHs. However, land use type had a strong impact on methanotroph and methanogen and on total bacterial and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric and Environmental Gas Dynamics · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Hydrocarbon exploration and reservoir analysis
