Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure

Item does not contain fulltext 1. Peatlands are natural sources of atmospheric methane (CH4), an important greenhouse gas. It is established that peatland methane dynamics are controlled by both biotic and abiotic conditions, yet the interactive effect of these drivers is less studied and consequent...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Robroek, Bjorn J.M., Jassey, V.E.J., Kox, M.A.R., Berendsen, R.L., Mills, R.T.E., Cecillon, L., Puissant, J., Meima-Franke, M., Bakker, P., Bodelier, P.L.E.
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Dryad 2015
Subjects:
CH4
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2066/218020
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c
id ftunivnijmegen:oai:repository.ubn.ru.nl:2066/218020
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivnijmegen:oai:repository.ubn.ru.nl:2066/218020 2023-05-15T16:06:06+02:00 Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure Robroek, Bjorn J.M. Jassey, V.E.J. Kox, M.A.R. Berendsen, R.L. Mills, R.T.E. Cecillon, L. Puissant, J. Meima-Franke, M. Bakker, P. Bodelier, P.L.E. 2015 https://hdl.handle.net/2066/218020 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c unknown Dryad https://hdl.handle.net/2066/218020 https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c path analysis Sphagnum magellanicum Vaccinium oxycoccus mid–infrared spectroscopy Graminoids Plant–soil (below-ground) interactions Empetrum nigrum Sphagnum spp Eriophorum vaginatum Calluna vulgaris methanotrophic communities methanogenesis CH4 PLFA Sphagnum cuspidatum Sphagnum–dominated peatlands Rhynchospora alba Eriophorum angustifolium Andromeda polifolia pmoA Ericoids Sphagnum rubellum Erica tetralix Holocene Ecological Microbiology Dataset 2015 ftunivnijmegen https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c 2022-12-21T23:26:01Z Item does not contain fulltext 1. Peatlands are natural sources of atmospheric methane (CH4), an important greenhouse gas. It is established that peatland methane dynamics are controlled by both biotic and abiotic conditions, yet the interactive effect of these drivers is less studied and consequently poorly understood. 2. Climate change affects the distribution of vascular plant functional types (PFTs) in peatlands. By removing specific PFTs, we assessed their effects on peat organic matter chemistry, microbial community composition and on potential methane production (PMP) and oxidation (PMO) in two microhabitats (lawns and hummocks). 3. Whilst PFT removal only marginally altered the peat organic matter chemistry, we observed considerable changes in microbial community structure. This resulted in altered PMP and PMO. PMP was slightly lower when graminoids were removed, whilst PMO was highest in the absence of both vascular PFTs (graminoids and ericoids), but only in the hummocks. 4. Path analyses demonstrate that different plant–soil interactions drive PMP and PMO in peatlands and that changes in biotic and abiotic factors can have auto-amplifying effects on current CH4 dynamics. 5. Synthesis. Changing environmental conditions will, both directly and indirectly, affect peatland processes, causing unforeseen changes in CH4 dynamics. The resilience of peatland CH4 dynamics to environmental change therefore depends on the interaction between plant community composition and microbial communities. Dataset Empetrum nigrum Radboud University: DSpace
institution Open Polar
collection Radboud University: DSpace
op_collection_id ftunivnijmegen
language unknown
topic path analysis
Sphagnum magellanicum
Vaccinium oxycoccus
mid–infrared spectroscopy
Graminoids
Plant–soil (below-ground) interactions
Empetrum nigrum
Sphagnum spp
Eriophorum vaginatum
Calluna vulgaris
methanotrophic communities
methanogenesis
CH4
PLFA
Sphagnum cuspidatum
Sphagnum–dominated peatlands
Rhynchospora alba
Eriophorum angustifolium
Andromeda polifolia
pmoA
Ericoids
Sphagnum rubellum
Erica tetralix
Holocene
Ecological Microbiology
spellingShingle path analysis
Sphagnum magellanicum
Vaccinium oxycoccus
mid–infrared spectroscopy
Graminoids
Plant–soil (below-ground) interactions
Empetrum nigrum
Sphagnum spp
Eriophorum vaginatum
Calluna vulgaris
methanotrophic communities
methanogenesis
CH4
PLFA
Sphagnum cuspidatum
Sphagnum–dominated peatlands
Rhynchospora alba
Eriophorum angustifolium
Andromeda polifolia
pmoA
Ericoids
Sphagnum rubellum
Erica tetralix
Holocene
Ecological Microbiology
Robroek, Bjorn J.M.
Jassey, V.E.J.
Kox, M.A.R.
Berendsen, R.L.
Mills, R.T.E.
Cecillon, L.
Puissant, J.
Meima-Franke, M.
Bakker, P.
Bodelier, P.L.E.
Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
topic_facet path analysis
Sphagnum magellanicum
Vaccinium oxycoccus
mid–infrared spectroscopy
Graminoids
Plant–soil (below-ground) interactions
Empetrum nigrum
Sphagnum spp
Eriophorum vaginatum
Calluna vulgaris
methanotrophic communities
methanogenesis
CH4
PLFA
Sphagnum cuspidatum
Sphagnum–dominated peatlands
Rhynchospora alba
Eriophorum angustifolium
Andromeda polifolia
pmoA
Ericoids
Sphagnum rubellum
Erica tetralix
Holocene
Ecological Microbiology
description Item does not contain fulltext 1. Peatlands are natural sources of atmospheric methane (CH4), an important greenhouse gas. It is established that peatland methane dynamics are controlled by both biotic and abiotic conditions, yet the interactive effect of these drivers is less studied and consequently poorly understood. 2. Climate change affects the distribution of vascular plant functional types (PFTs) in peatlands. By removing specific PFTs, we assessed their effects on peat organic matter chemistry, microbial community composition and on potential methane production (PMP) and oxidation (PMO) in two microhabitats (lawns and hummocks). 3. Whilst PFT removal only marginally altered the peat organic matter chemistry, we observed considerable changes in microbial community structure. This resulted in altered PMP and PMO. PMP was slightly lower when graminoids were removed, whilst PMO was highest in the absence of both vascular PFTs (graminoids and ericoids), but only in the hummocks. 4. Path analyses demonstrate that different plant–soil interactions drive PMP and PMO in peatlands and that changes in biotic and abiotic factors can have auto-amplifying effects on current CH4 dynamics. 5. Synthesis. Changing environmental conditions will, both directly and indirectly, affect peatland processes, causing unforeseen changes in CH4 dynamics. The resilience of peatland CH4 dynamics to environmental change therefore depends on the interaction between plant community composition and microbial communities.
format Dataset
author Robroek, Bjorn J.M.
Jassey, V.E.J.
Kox, M.A.R.
Berendsen, R.L.
Mills, R.T.E.
Cecillon, L.
Puissant, J.
Meima-Franke, M.
Bakker, P.
Bodelier, P.L.E.
author_facet Robroek, Bjorn J.M.
Jassey, V.E.J.
Kox, M.A.R.
Berendsen, R.L.
Mills, R.T.E.
Cecillon, L.
Puissant, J.
Meima-Franke, M.
Bakker, P.
Bodelier, P.L.E.
author_sort Robroek, Bjorn J.M.
title Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
title_short Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
title_full Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
title_fullStr Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
title_full_unstemmed Data from: Peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
title_sort data from: peatland vascular plant functional types affect methane dynamics by altering microbial community structure
publisher Dryad
publishDate 2015
url https://hdl.handle.net/2066/218020
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c
genre Empetrum nigrum
genre_facet Empetrum nigrum
op_relation https://hdl.handle.net/2066/218020
https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.3216c
_version_ 1766402013560569856