Elevated CO2 and high salinity enhance the abundance of sulfate reducers in a salt marsh ecosystem

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Standard Standard

Elevated CO2 and high salinity enhance the abundance of sulfate reducers in a salt marsh ecosystem. / Kim, Seon-Young; Freeman, Chris; Lukac, Martin et al.
In: Applied Soil Ecology, Vol. 147, 103386, 03.2020.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

HarvardHarvard

APA

Kim, S.-Y., Freeman, C., Lukac, M., Lee, S.-H., Kim, S. D., & Kang, H. (2020). Elevated CO2 and high salinity enhance the abundance of sulfate reducers in a salt marsh ecosystem. Applied Soil Ecology, 147, Article 103386. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apsoil.2019.103386

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Kim SY, Freeman C, Lukac M, Lee SH, Kim SD, Kang H. Elevated CO2 and high salinity enhance the abundance of sulfate reducers in a salt marsh ecosystem. Applied Soil Ecology. 2020 Mar;147:103386. Epub 2019 Nov 1. doi: 10.1016/j.apsoil.2019.103386

Author

Kim, Seon-Young ; Freeman, Chris ; Lukac, Martin et al. / Elevated CO2 and high salinity enhance the abundance of sulfate reducers in a salt marsh ecosystem. In: Applied Soil Ecology. 2020 ; Vol. 147.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Elevated CO2 and high salinity enhance the abundance of sulfate reducers in a salt marsh ecosystem

AU - Kim, Seon-Young

AU - Freeman, Chris

AU - Lukac, Martin

AU - Lee, Seung-Hoon

AU - Kim, Sean D.

AU - Kang, Hojeong

PY - 2020/3

Y1 - 2020/3

N2 - Salt marshes are anticipated to be exposed to elevated atmospheric CO2 and high salinity due to sea-level rise in the future. This study aims to investigate the effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 and high salinity on microbial communities using intact cores collected from a salt marsh in North Wales, UK. The cores were exposed to two levels of CO2 (ambient vs. ambient +200 ppm) and two levels of salinity (control vs. control + 10 ppt) over a growing season in the Free-Air Carbon Dioxide Enrichment (FACE) facility. We focused on the abundances of bacteria, sulfate reducers (SRB), methanogens and denitrifiers as they play a central role in greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, the activities of extracellular enzymes were determined to assess the effects on microbial activity, followed by Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) to elucidate possible mechanism for the changes we observed. Elevated CO2 significantly increased DOC in pore water for the control salinity treatment during a vigorous growing season (i.e., May - Aug) but not the high salinity treatment. Microbial diversity presented by Shannon’s diversity derived from T-RFLP analysis showed no significant changes except for nirS genes, suggesting potential influence of elevated CO2 on denitrification. Microbial abundances changed substantially for certain functional groups; For example, the abundance of SRB increased both by elevated CO2 and high salinity. In contrast, total bacterial abundance declined under the treatment of high salinity. SEM suggests that elevated CO2 increases DOC in pore-water, which increased sulfate reducers. Salinity plays an additional role in this process to selectively increasing SRB without affecting methanogens. Overall, the results of this study suggest that SRB will play a key role in organic matter decomposition in salt marshes as atmospheric CO2 and salinity increase. This is most likely to be mediated by changes in the quantity and the quality of organic carbon derived from salt marsh vegetation.

AB - Salt marshes are anticipated to be exposed to elevated atmospheric CO2 and high salinity due to sea-level rise in the future. This study aims to investigate the effects of elevated atmospheric CO2 and high salinity on microbial communities using intact cores collected from a salt marsh in North Wales, UK. The cores were exposed to two levels of CO2 (ambient vs. ambient +200 ppm) and two levels of salinity (control vs. control + 10 ppt) over a growing season in the Free-Air Carbon Dioxide Enrichment (FACE) facility. We focused on the abundances of bacteria, sulfate reducers (SRB), methanogens and denitrifiers as they play a central role in greenhouse gas emissions. In addition, the activities of extracellular enzymes were determined to assess the effects on microbial activity, followed by Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) to elucidate possible mechanism for the changes we observed. Elevated CO2 significantly increased DOC in pore water for the control salinity treatment during a vigorous growing season (i.e., May - Aug) but not the high salinity treatment. Microbial diversity presented by Shannon’s diversity derived from T-RFLP analysis showed no significant changes except for nirS genes, suggesting potential influence of elevated CO2 on denitrification. Microbial abundances changed substantially for certain functional groups; For example, the abundance of SRB increased both by elevated CO2 and high salinity. In contrast, total bacterial abundance declined under the treatment of high salinity. SEM suggests that elevated CO2 increases DOC in pore-water, which increased sulfate reducers. Salinity plays an additional role in this process to selectively increasing SRB without affecting methanogens. Overall, the results of this study suggest that SRB will play a key role in organic matter decomposition in salt marshes as atmospheric CO2 and salinity increase. This is most likely to be mediated by changes in the quantity and the quality of organic carbon derived from salt marsh vegetation.

KW - DOC

KW - Elevated CO2

KW - Salinity

KW - Salt marsh

KW - Sulfate reducers

U2 - 10.1016/j.apsoil.2019.103386

DO - 10.1016/j.apsoil.2019.103386

M3 - Article

VL - 147

JO - Applied Soil Ecology

JF - Applied Soil Ecology

SN - 0929-1393

M1 - 103386

ER -