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Different atmospheric methane-oxidizing communities in European beech and Norway spruce soils.

TLDR
It is indicated that the methanotrophic diversity and abundance in spruce soils are lower than those of beech soils, suggesting that tree species-related factors might influence the in situ activity of methnotrophs.
Abstract
Norway spruce (Picea abies) forests exhibit lower annual atmospheric methane consumption rates than do European beech (Fagus sylvatica) forests. In the current study, pmoA (encoding a subunit of membrane-bound CH4 monooxygenase) genes from three temperate forest ecosystems with both beech and spruce stands were analyzed to assess the potential effect of tree species on methanotrophic communities. A pmoA sequence difference of 7% at the derived protein level correlated with the species-level distance cutoff value of 3% based on the 16S rRNA gene. Applying this distance cutoff, higher numbers of species-level pmoA genotypes were detected in beech than in spruce soil samples, all affiliating with upland soil cluster α (USCα). Additionally, two deep-branching genotypes (named 6 and 7) were present in various soil samples not affiliating with pmoA or amoA. Abundance of USCα pmoA genes was higher in beech soils and reached up to (1.2 ± 0.2) × 108pmoA genes per g of dry weight. Calculated atmospheric methane oxidation rates per cell yielded the same trend. However, these values were below the theoretical threshold necessary for facilitating cell maintenance, suggesting that USCα species might require alternative carbon or energy sources to thrive in forest soils. These collective results indicate that the methanotrophic diversity and abundance in spruce soils are lower than those of beech soils, suggesting that tree species-related factors might influence the in situ activity of methanotrophs.

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Diversity and Habitat Preferences of Cultivated and Uncultivated Aerobic Methanotrophic Bacteria Evaluated Based on pmoA as Molecular Marker

TL;DR: The present diversity of cultivated and uncultivated aerobic methanotrophic bacteria based on pmoA gene sequence diversity is described and habitat specificity of these bacteria at different levels of taxonomic resolution is evaluated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Conventional methanotrophs are responsible for atmospheric methane oxidation in paddy soils.

TL;DR: The induction of HAMO activity occurred only after the rapid growth of methanotrophic populations, and a metatranscriptome-wide association study suggests that the concurrent high- and low-affinity methane oxidation was catalysed by known meethanotrophs rather than by the proposed novel atmospheric methane oxidizers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soil methane oxidation and land-use change – from process to mitigation

TL;DR: In this article, a review of land-use change and soil management can be used to correct the imbalance between the net CH4 emissions from natural and anthropogenic sources of this potent greenhouse gas, and its consumption by physical and biological processes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions between nitrogenous fertilizers and methane cycling in wetland and upland soils

TL;DR: A review of the results of these studies can be found in the community composition and the traits of the microbes involved in methane cycling as discussed by the authors, which are contradictory and await mechanistic explanations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agriculture's impact on microbial diversity and associated fluxes of carbon dioxide and methane

TL;DR: The expectation that microbial diversity is a better predictor of the magnitude and stability of processes catalyzed by organisms with highly specialized metabolisms as compared with processes driven by widely distributed metabolic processes, like CO2 production in heterotrophs is upheld.
References
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Profiling of complex microbial populations by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis analysis of polymerase chain reaction-amplified genes coding for 16S rRNA

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