The functional potential of methane producing and consuming microorganisms in a changing world : Den funktionella potentialen hos mikroorganismer som producerar och förbrukar metan i en föränderlig värld.

It’s clear that human activities have heated our climate via the release of anthropogenic greenhouse gases. Recent changes within the earth climate are rapid, intensifying, and unprecedented. With each additional increment of warming, climate change is impacting ecosystems through changes in average...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: White, Joel
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Lund University (Media-Tryck) 2023
Subjects:
Online Access:https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/9f7c92ff-5ad1-46e6-a919-7a88fa3c297c
https://portal.research.lu.se/files/135867448/e_nailing_ex_Joel.pdf
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Summary:It’s clear that human activities have heated our climate via the release of anthropogenic greenhouse gases. Recent changes within the earth climate are rapid, intensifying, and unprecedented. With each additional increment of warming, climate change is impacting ecosystems through changes in average conditions, climate variability, coupled with other associated changes such as biodiversity loss and changes in elemental cycles.One ecosystem of particular importance are peatlands. Despite covering only ~3% of the terrestrial environment, northern peatlands are estimated to store 415 ± 150 Pg carbon, while permafrost peatlands are estimated to store 185 ± 66 Pg of soil organic carbon soil, thus acting as a large carbon sink. The highly concentrated carbon is maintained by the waterlogged anaerobic conditions that limit oxygen and bacterial decomposition. However, these anaerobic conditions favour methanogenesis, i.e. the formation of the strong greenhouse gas methane. During the thesis, one laboratory and three in-situ field studies were conducted. In paper I, we studied variation in methane fluxes with the structure and function of methane producing and consuming communities. In paper II, we performed an in-situ drought experiment across two years where we identified the effects of drought on the functional potential of methane producing and consuming communities. While working on paper II, we conducted a temporal experiment (paper IV) to intemperate the variation in methane emission rates and their δ13C-CH4 values. Finally, paper III addresses how sub-arctic peatland microbial communities respond to permafrost thaw at different degradation rates and whether this change is reflected in greenhouse gas emissions.We found that the structure and composition of the whole methane producing, and consuming community has minor effect on predicting the magnitude methane fluxes (paper I), however, during drought the structure and functional composition significantly changed in favor of more methane oxidation despite the ...