| Literature DB >> 29429010 |
Shiping Wei1,2, Hongpeng Cui3, Youhai Zhu4, Zhenquan Lu4, Shouji Pang4, Shuai Zhang4, Hailiang Dong3, Xin Su5,6.
Abstract
Permafrost thaw can bring negative consequences in terms of ecosystems, resulting in permafrost collapse, waterlogging, thermokarst lake development, and species composition changes. Little is known about how permafrost thaw influences microbial community shifts and their activities. Here, we show that the dominant archaeal community shifts from Methanomicrobiales to Methanosarcinales in response to the permafrost thaw, and the increase in methane emission is found to be associated with the methanogenic archaea, which rapidly bloom with nearly tenfold increase in total number. The mcrA gene clone libraries analyses indicate that Methanocellales/Rice Cluster I was predominant both in the original permafrost and in the thawed permafrost. However, only species belonging to Methanosarcinales showed higher transcriptional activities in the thawed permafrost, indicating a shift of methanogens from hydrogenotrophic to partly acetoclastic methane-generating metabolic processes. In addition, data also show the soil texture and features change as a result of microbial reproduction and activity induced by this permafrost thaw. Those data indicate that microbial ecology under warming permafrost has potential impacts on ecosystem and methane emissions.Entities:
Keywords: Archaea community; Methane emission; Methanogenic community; Permafrost thaw; mcrA
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29429010 DOI: 10.1007/s00792-018-1007-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Extremophiles ISSN: 1431-0651 Impact factor: 2.395