EGU2020-861
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-861
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Paddy soil fertilization, organic and inorganic alternative electron acceptors shape microbial community network and determine competitive pathways of Anaerobic Oxidation of Methane

Lichao Fan
Lichao Fan
  • Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Subtropical Agriculture, 410125 Hunan, China (lfan@gwdg.de)

Anaerobic oxidation of methane (AOM) is a globally important CH4 sink that is offsetting potential CH4 emission into the atmosphere. The AOM depends on the availability of the alternative to oxygen electron acceptors (AEAs) which can be of inorganic (e.g. NO3-, Fe3+, SO42-), and organic (e.g. humic acids) origin. Flooded paddy soils are among the ecosystems with pronounced AOM. Due to a variety of fertilization practices, including combinations of mineral (NPK) and organic (pig manure, biochar) fertilizers, there is a range of AEAs available in paddy soil under anaerobic conditions. However, it remains unclear whether (i) AOM has a preferential pathway in paddy soil, and (ii) how do AEAs and fertilization type affect anaerobic microbial interactions. Therefore, we tested the effects of key AEAs – NO3-, Fe3+, SO42-, and humic acids – on bacterial community structure (by 16s rRNA gene sequencing) in paddy soil with ongoing AOM experiment under mineral and organic fertilization. We hypothesized that incorporation of labeled 13C-CH4 during AOM into CO2 and phospholipid fatty acid biomarkers (PLFA) along with co-occurrence bacterial network analysis will reveal the preferential AOM pathway as related to a type of fertilization.

Bacterial alpha-diversity was significantly increased after 84-day anaerobic incubation. Pig manure significantly increased the microbial biomass as compared with NPK and Biochar, but the AEAs amendment did not affect the biomass. Anaerobic incubation, fertilization treatments specific biochar and NPK, and AEAs amendments specific SO42- and humic acids were factors contributing to microbiome variation. Network analysis indicated that microbial communities involved in CH4 cycling (i.e. NC10, sulfate-reducing bacteria, Geobacter, syntrophic bacteria with methanogens and ANME-2) had non-random co-occurrence patterns and was modularized. There were 16 13C-enriched PLFA biomarkers confirming the incorporation of C-CH4 into bacteria. AOM and 13C-PLFA were significantly higher under Pig manure relative to other fertilizations. AOM was more intensive under NO3- than Fe3+ and humic acids, but was close to zero under SO42- amendment. However, the relative abundance of NC10 phylum which includes organisms performing AOM, and sulfate-reducing bacteria were higher under SO42-. The relative abundance of Geobacter was highest under biochar and NPK fertilization with SO42- and humic acids amendments. Taken together, NO3--driven AOM is the most potent AOM pathway in paddy soil, which however co-exists with the AOM pathways via reduction of NO2- by NC10 bacteria and reduction of Fe3+ and humic acids by consortia of ANME with Geobacter. Consequently, the co-occurrence network and evidence from 13C incorporation into CO2 and PLFAs indicate the multiple competitive pathways of AOM in paddy soil.

How to cite: Fan, L.: Paddy soil fertilization, organic and inorganic alternative electron acceptors shape microbial community network and determine competitive pathways of Anaerobic Oxidation of Methane, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-861, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-861, 2019