Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments

Wet tundra environments of the Siberian Arctic are natural sources of the climate relevant trace gas methane. In order to improve our understanding of the present and future carbon exchange in dynamic permafrost environments the methane content as well as the activity, diversity and physiology of th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wagner, Dirk
Format: Conference Object
Language:unknown
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/18170/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.28705
id ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:18170
record_format openpolar
spelling ftawi:oai:epic.awi.de:18170 2024-09-15T18:17:34+00:00 Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments Wagner, Dirk 2008 https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/18170/ https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.28705 unknown Wagner, D. (2008) Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments , Colloquium, University of Duisburg, Duisburg, February 14 . hdl:10013/epic.28705 EPIC3Colloquium, University of Duisburg, Duisburg, February 14, 2008 p. Conference notRev 2008 ftawi 2024-06-24T04:00:13Z Wet tundra environments of the Siberian Arctic are natural sources of the climate relevant trace gas methane. In order to improve our understanding of the present and future carbon exchange in dynamic permafrost environments the methane content as well as the activity, diversity and physiology of the methanogenic community have to be studied. For these investigations permafrost soils as well as terrestrial and submarine permafrost cores of Holocene and late Pleistocene ages from the Laptev Sea coast have been used. The results indicated the existence of a permafrost microbiota, which has well adapted to the extreme environmental conditions. Furthermore, first evidence of modern methanogenesis in the perennially frozen sediments was given by microbial activity and PLEL analysis. The characterization of pure cultures of methanogenic archaea obtained from permafrost environments showed an unexpected resistance against extreme living conditions such as low temperature, high salinity, desiccation and starvation. Conference Object laptev Laptev Sea permafrost Tundra Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
institution Open Polar
collection Alfred Wegener Institute for Polar- and Marine Research (AWI): ePIC (electronic Publication Information Center)
op_collection_id ftawi
language unknown
description Wet tundra environments of the Siberian Arctic are natural sources of the climate relevant trace gas methane. In order to improve our understanding of the present and future carbon exchange in dynamic permafrost environments the methane content as well as the activity, diversity and physiology of the methanogenic community have to be studied. For these investigations permafrost soils as well as terrestrial and submarine permafrost cores of Holocene and late Pleistocene ages from the Laptev Sea coast have been used. The results indicated the existence of a permafrost microbiota, which has well adapted to the extreme environmental conditions. Furthermore, first evidence of modern methanogenesis in the perennially frozen sediments was given by microbial activity and PLEL analysis. The characterization of pure cultures of methanogenic archaea obtained from permafrost environments showed an unexpected resistance against extreme living conditions such as low temperature, high salinity, desiccation and starvation.
format Conference Object
author Wagner, Dirk
spellingShingle Wagner, Dirk
Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments
author_facet Wagner, Dirk
author_sort Wagner, Dirk
title Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments
title_short Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments
title_full Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments
title_fullStr Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments
title_full_unstemmed Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments
title_sort microbial perspectives of the methane cycle in terrestrial and submarine permafrost environments
publishDate 2008
url https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/18170/
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.28705
genre laptev
Laptev Sea
permafrost
Tundra
genre_facet laptev
Laptev Sea
permafrost
Tundra
op_source EPIC3Colloquium, University of Duisburg, Duisburg, February 14, 2008 p.
op_relation Wagner, D. (2008) Microbial Perspectives of the Methane Cycle in terrestrial and Submarine Permafrost Environments , Colloquium, University of Duisburg, Duisburg, February 14 . hdl:10013/epic.28705
_version_ 1810455630071201792