| Literature DB >> 33193221 |
Ezra Kitson1, Nicholle G A Bell1.
Abstract
Peatlands are significant global carbon stores and play an important role in mediating the flux of greenhouse gasses into the atmosphere. During the 20th century substantial areas of northern peatlands were drained to repurpose the land for industrial or agricultural use. Drained peatlands have dysfunctional microbial communities, which can lead to net carbon emissions. Rewetting of drained peatlands is therefore an environmental priority, yet our understanding of the effects of peatland drainage and rewetting on microbial communities is still incomplete. Here we summarize the last decade of research into the response of the wider microbial community, methane-cycling microorganisms, and micro-fauna to drainage and rewetting in fens and bogs in Europe and North America. Emphasis is placed on current research methodologies and their limitations. We propose targets for future work including: accounting for timescale of drainage and rewetting events; better vertical and lateral coverage of samples across a peatland; the integration of proteomic and metabolomic datasets into functional community analysis; the use of RNA sequencing to differentiate the active community from legacy DNA; and further study into the response of the viral and micro-faunal communities to peatland drainage and rewetting. This review should benefit researchers embarking on studies in wetland microbiology and non-microbiologists working on peatland drainage and rewetting in general.Entities:
Keywords: climate change mitigation; fens and bogs; microbial communities and soil quality; peatland drainage; peatland restoration; peatland rewetting; soil metagenomics
Year: 2020 PMID: 33193221 PMCID: PMC7658402 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.582812
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
21 Studies investigating the response of microbial communities to peatland drainage and rewetting.
| Location [key] | Microbial analysis method | Communities Studied | Peatland status | References |
| Lakkasuo mire, Finland [A] | Potential and actual enzyme activities assays. RNA extraction followed by cDNA conversion. PCR-DGGE fingerprint analysis of actinobacteria 16S and fungal 18S RNA genes. Sequencing of DGGE bands. ( | Bacteria; | Near natural; | |
| Lakkasuo mire, Finland [A] | RNA extraction followed by cDNA conversion. PCR-DGGE fingerprint analysis of actinobacteria 16S and fungal 18S RNA genes. Sequencing of DGGE bands. ( | Fungi; | Near natural; | |
| Six sites in Finland [B; C; D] | T-RFLP fingerprinting and clone library sequencing of | Methanogens; Methanotrophs | Near natural; | |
| Four sites in Czech Republic [E] | PCR-DGGE Fingerprint analysis on | Methanogens | Near natural; | |
| Bois-des-Bel bog, Eastern Canada [F] | Microbial functional diversity and activity calculated using MicroResp system. | Bacteria; | Near natural; | |
| Two sites in Eastern Canada [F; G] | T-RFLP fingerprinting of | Bacteria; | Near natural (dry bog); | |
| Holme Moss, Northern England [H] | High through-put sequencing of | Bacteria; | Original vegetation; | |
| Twitchell Island, Western United States [I] | High through-put sequencing of | Bacteria; | Rewetted (previously drained by levees in 1869, rewetting using siphon pipe and dams since mid-1990s) | |
| Two sites, northern and southern, in Finland. [A; J] | Microbial respiration and growth rate assay. PLFA based biomass analysis of bacteria and fungi. PCR-DGGE fingerprint analysis of fungal | Bacteria; | Near natural; | |
| Sumava Mountains, Czech Republic [E] ( | High through-put sequencing of | Bacteria; | Near natural; | |
| Migneint, Wales [K] | Taxonomic identification by eye using a transmitted light microscope. | Testate amoebae | Rewetted (ditch blocking/reprofiling ∼2011); Drained (drainage ditches ∼1940s–1970s, burning, afforestation) | |
| Two sites, northern and southern, in Finland. [A; J] | DNA extraction and qPCR of DNA extracts on | Methanogens; | Near natural; | |
| Carbonate – rich fen, Eastern Poland [L] | Abundance quantification using a variety of lab assays, using DAPI stain, primuline and Lugol’s solution. Taxonomic of protists identification by eye. | Bacteria; | Rewetted (drained in 1960s, rewetted by dams since 2006) | |
| Lakkasuo mire, Finland [A] | PLFA analysis of community structure and biomass. | Bacteria; | Near natural; | |
| Two sites in Wales [K] | ARISA fingerprinting, high throughput | Bacteria; | Near natural (mesocosm drought experiment) | |
| Linje Mire, Poland and Forbonnet, France [M; N] | Flow cytometry, epifluorescence, and light microscopy to estimate bacterial size and abundance. and abundance of microbial consumers and fungal biomass. Phenol oxidase activity assay. | Testate amoebae; | Near natural (water table manipulation experiment) | |
| Aitoneva, Finland [O] | T-RFLP fingerprinting using | Methanogens; | Near natural; | |
| Mining sites in Poland [P] | High throughput sequencing of | Methanogens; | Near natural; Rewetted (drainage ditches blocked ∼2000); Drained (block cut, surface milled actively mined, and abandoned ∼2004, ∼2009 sites). | |
| Two sites in north- eastern Germany [Q] | High throughput sequencing of | Bacteria; | Rewetted (One site drained in 1970s and rewetted using a dam in 2009, other site drained from 18th century with active pumping in 1970s and rewetted in 2004). | |
| Linje mire, northern Poland. [M] | High throughout sequencing of the | Fungi | Near natural (water table manipulation experiment consisting of wet, ambient, and dry treatments). | |
| 13 sites in lowland Europe [K; R-Z] | High throughput sequencing of | Bacteria; | Near natural; |
FIGURE 1Field locations used by studies investigating the response of microbial communities to peatland drainage and rewetting. See Table 1 for study description (∗) = Marsh. Map made using the M_map package in MATLAB (Pawlowicz, 2020).