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Showing papers on "Methanogen published in 2018"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Ferroferric oxide was dosed in an anaerobic sequencing batch reactor fed with tryptone-based synthetic wastewater and enhanced the maximum methane production rate by 78.3% in a reaction cycle but also improved methane production when hydrogen/carbon dioxide or acetate was used as the substrate.

242 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study demonstrated for the first time that acclimation of methanogenic communities to extreme ammonia levels in continuous AD process is possible, by developing a specialised acclimated AD microbiome.

129 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is recommended the local fertilization pattern should change from 300 N kg ha-1 of organic manure to the same level of mixed fertilization, because of the increased CH4 production in OT compared to other treatments.

79 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Application of external potential enriched putative exoelectrogens at the anode biofilm and hydrogenotrophic methanogens at the cathodeBioelectrochemical cell may have contributed to the observed enhanced CH4 production in the AD-BEC system.

69 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
05 Jul 2018-Mbio
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that conductive particles enable the partnership between SAO bacteria and methanogens from the coastal sediments of the Bothnian Bay of the Baltic Sea, and mineral SAO (syntrophic acetate oxidation) could be a vital pathway for CO2-reductive methanogenesis in the environment, especially in sediments rich in conductive minerals.
Abstract: Coastal sediments are rich in conductive particles, possibly affecting microbial processes for which acetate is a central intermediate. In the methanogenic zone, acetate is consumed by methanogens and/or syntrophic acetate-oxidizing (SAO) consortia. SAO consortia live under extreme thermodynamic pressure, and their survival depends on successful partnership. Here, we demonstrate that conductive particles enable the partnership between SAO bacteria (i.e., Geobacter spp.) and methanogens (Methanosarcina spp.) from the coastal sediments of the Bothnian Bay of the Baltic Sea. Baltic methanogenic sediments were rich in conductive minerals, had an apparent isotopic fractionation characteristic of CO2-reductive methanogenesis, and were inhabited by Geobacter and Methanosarcina As long as conductive particles were delivered, Geobacter and Methanosarcina persisted, whereas exclusion of conductive particles led to the extinction of Geobacter Baltic Geobacter did not establish a direct electric contact with Methanosarcina, necessitating conductive particles as electrical conduits. Within SAO consortia, Geobacter was an efficient [13C]acetate utilizer, accounting for 82% of the assimilation and 27% of the breakdown of acetate. Geobacter benefits from the association with the methanogen, because in the absence of an electron acceptor it can use Methanosarcina as a terminal electron sink. Consequently, inhibition of methanogenesis constrained the SAO activity of Geobacter as well. A potential benefit for Methanosarcina partnering with Geobacter is that together they competitively exclude acetoclastic methanogens like Methanothrix from an environment rich in conductive particles. Conductive particle-mediated SAO could explain the abundance of acetate oxidizers like Geobacter in the methanogenic zone of sediments where no electron acceptors other than CO2 are available.IMPORTANCE Acetate-oxidizing bacteria are known to thrive in mutualistic consortia in which H2 or formate is shuttled to a methane-producing Archaea partner. Here, we discovered that such bacteria could instead transfer electrons via conductive minerals. Mineral SAO (syntrophic acetate oxidation) could be a vital pathway for CO2-reductive methanogenesis in the environment, especially in sediments rich in conductive minerals. Mineral-facilitated SAO is therefore of potential importance for both iron and methane cycles in sediments and soils. Additionally, our observations imply that agricultural runoff or amendments with conductive chars could trigger a significant increase in methane emissions.

69 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
28 Aug 2018
TL;DR: Using an integrated approach combining multidomain quantitative metatranscriptomics with gas and volatile fatty acid (VFA) profiling, this article obtained the most comprehensive picture of the active rumen microbiome during feed degradation to date.
Abstract: Ruminant livestock is a major source of the potent greenhouse gas methane. The complex rumen microbiome, consisting of bacteria, archaea, and microbial eukaryotes, facilitates anaerobic plant biomass degradation in the cow rumen, leading to methane emissions. Using an integrated approach combining multidomain quantitative metatranscriptomics with gas and volatile fatty acid (VFA) profiling, we aimed at obtaining the most comprehensive picture of the active rumen microbiome during feed degradation to date. Bacterial, archaeal, and eukaryotic biomass, but also methane emissions and VFA concentrations, increased drastically within an hour after feed intake. mRNA profiling revealed a dynamic response of carbohydrate-active enzyme transcripts, transcripts involved in VFA production and methanogenesis. While the relative abundances of functional transcripts did not mirror observed processes, such as methane emissions, transformation to mRNA abundance per gram of rumen fluid echoed ruminant processes. The microbiome composition was highly individual, with, e.g., ciliate, Neocallimastigaceae, Prevotellaceae, Succinivibrionaceae, and Fibrobacteraceae abundances differing between cows. Microbiome individuality was accompanied by inter- and intradomain multifunctional redundancy among microbiome members during feed degradation. This likely enabled the robust performance of the anaerobic degradation process in each rumen. Neocallimastigaceae and ciliates contributed an unexpectedly large share of transcripts for cellulose- and hemicellulose-degrading enzymes, respectively. Methyl-reducing but not CO2-reducing methanogens were positively correlated with methane emissions. While Methanomassiliicoccales switched from methanol to methylamines as electron acceptors, Methanosphaera became the dominating methanol-reducing methanogen. This study for the first time linked rumen meta-omics with processes and enabled holistic insights into the contribution of all microbiome members to feed degradation. IMPORTANCE Ruminant animals, such as cows, live in a tight symbiotic association with microorganisms, allowing them to feed on otherwise indigestible plant biomass as food sources. Methane is produced as an end product of the anaerobic feed degradation in ruminants and is emitted to the atmosphere, making ruminant animals among the major anthropogenic sources of the potent greenhouse gas methane. Using newly developed quantitative metatranscriptomics for holistic microbiome analysis, we here identified bacterial, archaeal, and eukaryotic key players and the short-term dynamics of the rumen microbiome during anaerobic plant biomass degradation and subsequent methane emissions. These novel insights might pave the way for novel ecologically and economically sustainable methane mitigation strategies, much needed in times of global climate change.

67 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that diversity is likely key to extremely high rates of methanogenesis and sulfate reduction observed in these wetlands and the inferred genomic diversity and metabolic versatility could result from dynamic environmental conditions, viral infections, and niche differentiation in the heterogeneous sediment matrix.
Abstract: Microorganisms drive high rates of methanogenesis and carbon mineralization in wetland ecosystems. These signals are especially pronounced in the Prairie Pothole Region of North America, the tenth largest wetland ecosystem in the world. Sulfate reduction rates up to 22 μmol cm−3 day−1 have been measured in these wetland sediments, as well as methane fluxes up to 160 mg m−2 h−1—some of the highest emissions ever measured in North American wetlands. While pore waters from PPR wetlands are characterized by high concentrations of sulfur species and dissolved organic carbon, the constraints on microbial activity are poorly understood. Here, we utilized metagenomics to investigate candidate sulfate reducers and methanogens in this ecosystem and identify metabolic and viral controls on microbial activity. We recovered 162 dsrA and 206 dsrD sequences from 18 sediment metagenomes and reconstructed 24 candidate sulfate reducer genomes assigned to seven phyla. These genomes encoded the potential for utilizing a wide variety of electron donors, such as methanol and other alcohols, methylamines, and glycine betaine. We also identified 37 mcrA sequences spanning five orders and recovered two putative methanogen genomes representing the most abundant taxa—Methanosaeta and Methanoregulaceae. However, given the abundance of Methanofollis-affiliated mcrA sequences, the detection of F420-dependent alcohol dehydrogenases, and millimolar concentrations of ethanol and 2-propanol in sediment pore fluids, we hypothesize that these alcohols may drive a significant fraction of methanogenesis in this ecosystem. Finally, extensive viral novelty was detected, with approximately 80% of viral populations being unclassified at any known taxonomic levels and absent from publicly available databases. Many of these viral populations were predicted to target dominant sulfate reducers and methanogens. Our results indicate that diversity is likely key to extremely high rates of methanogenesis and sulfate reduction observed in these wetlands. The inferred genomic diversity and metabolic versatility could result from dynamic environmental conditions, viral infections, and niche differentiation in the heterogeneous sediment matrix. These processes likely play an important role in modulating carbon and sulfur cycling in this ecosystem.

67 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors conducted various biogeochemical and molecular genetic analyses to characterize substrate availability, rates of methanogenesis, and methanogen community composition, and further evaluated the contribution of different substrates and pathways for methane production in deltaic surface and subsurface sediments.

67 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The presence in the human gut suggests an indirect correlation with severe diseases of the colon and possible beneficial or less favorable interactions between methanoarchaea and humans.
Abstract: Methanogens are anaerobic prokaryotes from the domain archaea that utilize hydrogen to reduce carbon dioxide, acetate, and a variety of methyl compounds into methane. Earlier believed to inhabit only the extreme environments, these organisms are now reported to be found in various environments including mesophilic habitats and the human body. The biological significance of methanogens for humans has been re-evaluated in the last few decades. Their contribution towards pathogenicity has received much less attention than their bacterial counterparts. In humans, methanogens have been studied in the gastrointestinal tract, mouth, and vagina, and considerable focus has shifted towards elucidating their possible role in the progression of disease conditions in humans. Methanoarchaea are also part of the human skin microbiome and proposed to play a role in ammonia turnover. Compared to hundreds of different bacterial species, the human body harbors only a handful of methanogen species represented by Methanobrevibacter smithii, Methanobrevibacter oralis, Methanosphaera stadtmanae, Methanomassiliicoccus luminyensis, Candidatus Methanomassiliicoccus intestinalis, and Candidatus Methanomethylophilus alvus. Their presence in the human gut suggests an indirect correlation with severe diseases of the colon. In this review, we examine the current knowledge about the methanoarchaea in the human body and possible beneficial or less favorable interactions.

65 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that a novel Geobacter population could oxidize ethanol and employed both hydrogen transfer and DIET depending on the accessibility of conductive materials.

60 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This research has demonstrated for the first time it has been demonstrated that stable granule formation is possible at a salinity level as high as 20 g Na+/L, in biological wastewater treatment reactors such as upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) reactors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the anaerobic digestion of nitrogen-rich chicken manure from egg-laying hens was investigated via long-term continuous experiments with and without the addition of different trace elements.
Abstract: In this study, the anaerobic digestion of nitrogen-rich chicken manure from egg-laying hens was investigated via long-term continuous experiments with and without the addition of different trace elements. With trace element supplementation, a CH4 yield of 0.26 ± 0.03 m3 kg−1 of volatile solids (VS) added was achieved at an organic loading rate (OLR) of 3.62 kg m−3 day−1 based on VS and total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) content greater than 7200 g m−3. Selenium (Se) was identified as the critical trace element for the stable anaerobic digestion of chicken manure. The dominant methanogen in the reactors was the hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanoculleus bourgensis. Therefore, we concluded that at elevated TAN concentrations, the CH4 production stimulated by Se supplementation likely occurred through syntrophic acetate oxidation. Without trace element supplementation, severe acetic and propionic acid accumulation occurred, causing the CH4 yield to decrease below 0.12 m3 kg−1 of VS added.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is plausible that the effect of ammonia on VFA degradation strongly depends on the ammonia sensitivity of the dominating taxa, for syntrophic propionate degraders as much as for acetoclastic methanogens.
Abstract: Ammonia inhibition is an important reason for reactor failures and economic losses in anaerobic digestion. Its impact on acetic acid degradation is well-studied, while its effect on propionic and butyric acid degradation has received little attention and is consequently not considered in the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1). To compare ammonia inhibition of the degradation of these three volatile fatty acids (VFAs), we fed a mixture of them as sole carbon source to three continuous stirred tank reactors (CSTRs) and increased ammonium bicarbonate concentrations in the influent from 52 to 277 mM. The use of this synthetic substrate allowed for the determination of degradation efficiencies for the individual acids. While butyric acid degradation was hardly affected by the increase of ammonia concentration, propionic acid degradation turned out to be even more inhibited than acetic acid degradation with degradation efficiencies dropping to 31 and 65% for propionic and acetic acid, respectively. The inhibited reactors acclimatized and approximated pre-disturbance degradation efficiencies toward the end of the experiment, which was accompanied by strong microbial community shifts, as observed by amplicon sequencing of 16S rRNA genes and terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism (T-RFLP) of mcrA genes. The acetoclastic methanogen Methanosaeta was completely replaced by Methanosarcina. The propionic acid degrading genus Syntrophobacter was replaced by yet unknown propionic acid degraders. The butyric acid degrading genus Syntrophomonas and hydrogenotrophic Methanomicrobiaceae were hardly affected. We hypothesized that the ammonia sensitivity of the initially dominating taxa Methanosaeta and Syntrophobacter led to a stronger inhibition of the acetic and propionic acid degradation compared to butyric acid degradation and hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis, which were facilitated by the ammonia tolerant taxa Syntrophomonas and Methanomicrobiaceae. We implemented this hypothesis into a multi-taxa extension of ADM1, which was able to simulate the dynamics of both microbial community composition and VFA concentration in the experiment. It is thus plausible that the effect of ammonia on VFA degradation strongly depends on the ammonia sensitivity of the dominating taxa, for syntrophic propionate degraders as much as for acetoclastic methanogens.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results showed that ZVI significantly increased both the relative abundance and quantity of Methanobacteriales and Methanosarcinales during hydrogenotrophic and acetoclastic methanogenesis, which potentially indicated the existence of a novelty syntrophic mechanism for extracellular electron transfer, which promoted CH4 generation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of trace elements supplementation in anaerobic digestion of chicken manure and their influence on methanogenic population dynamics were assessed at total ammonia nitrogen (TAN) concentrations as high as 5000 mg/L for 332 days.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The effect of the input raw materials on the diversity of the methanogen community is characterized and two predominant microorganisms in anaerobic digesters were found to be 99% identity by the sequences of the 16S rRNA gene to the Methanoculleus and Thermogymnomonas genera deposited in GenBank.
Abstract: Agriculture, food industry, and manufacturing are just some of the areas where anaerobic technology can be used. Currently, anaerobic technologies are mainly used for wastewater treatment, solid waste treatment, or for the production of electrical and thermal energy from energy crops processing. However, a clear trend is towards more intensive use of this technology in biomass and biodegradable waste processing and hydrogen or biomethane production. An enormous number of anaerobic digesters are operating worldwide but there is very little information about the effect of different substrate combinations on the methanogens community. This is due to the fact that each of the anaerobic digesters has its own unique microbial community. For the most effective management of anaerobic processes it would be important to know the composition of a consortium of anaerobic microorganisms present in anaerobic digesters processing different input combinations of raw material. This paper characterizes the effect of the input raw materials on the diversity of the methanogen community. Two predominant microorganisms in anaerobic digesters were found to be 99% identity by the sequences of the 16S rRNA gene to the Methanoculleus and Thermogymnomonas genera deposited in GenBank.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, a 3-year field measurement of CH4 fluxes from rice paddies was taken in 2012-2014 to examine their responses to elevated CO2 (enriched up to 500μmol/mol−1) and rising canopy air temperature (above ambient 1.5-2.0°C).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Temperature had an impact on the diversity of microbial communities in the biofilm that formed on the MES cathode, and the hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanobacterium became the predominant archaea for methane production from CO2 reduction, while the abundance of the aceticlastic methanogenic Methanosaeta decreased with increased temperature.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Next-generation sequencing revealed that Cytophaga sp.
Abstract: Bioaugmentation with a mixture of microorganisms (Bacteria and Archaea) was applied to improve the anaerobic digestion of sewage sludge. The study was performed in reactors operating at a temperature of 35 °C in semi-flow mode. Three runs with different doses of bioaugmenting mixture were conducted. Bioaugmentation of sewage sludge improved fermentation and allowed satisfactory biogas/methane yields and a biodegradation efficiency of more than 46%, despite the decrease in hydraulic retention time (HRT) from 20 d to 16.7 d. Moreover, in terms of biogas production, the rate constant k increased from 0.071 h−1 to 0.087 h−1 as doses of the bioaugmenting mixture were increased, as compared to values of 0.066 h−1 and 0.069 h−1 obtained with sewage sludge alone. Next-generation sequencing revealed that Cytophaga sp. predominated among Bacteria in digesters and that the hydrogenotrophic methanogen Methanoculleus sp. was the most abundant genus among Archaea.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is suggested that a single-phase configuration is more advantageous for robust treatment of food waste without pH control at high organic and hydraulic loads.

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Jul 2018-Archaea
TL;DR: It is shown that M. thermophila used CO2 to perform hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis in the presence as well as in the absence of methanol, resulting in a biphasic methane production.
Abstract: Although Methanosarcinales are versatile concerning their methanogenic substrates, the ability of Methanosarcina thermophila to use carbon dioxide (CO2) for catabolic and anabolic metabolism was not proven until now. Here, we show that M. thermophila used CO2 to perform hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis in the presence as well as in the absence of methanol. During incubation with hydrogen, the methanogen utilized the substrates methanol and CO2 consecutively, resulting in a biphasic methane production. Growth exclusively from CO2 occurred slowly but reproducibly with concomitant production of biomass, verified by DNA quantification. Besides verification through multiple transfers into fresh medium, the identity of the culture was confirmed by 16s RNA sequencing, and the incorporation of carbon atoms from 13CO2 into 13CH4 molecules was measured to validate the obtained data. New insights into the physiology of M. thermophila can serve as reference for genomic analyses to link genes with metabolic features in uncultured organisms.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In anaerobic digestion of chicken manure at total ammonium nitrogen concentrations over 6000 mg L-1, Se supplementation was critical but not sufficient alone for long-term stable CH4 production, while addition of a mix consisting of Co, Mo, Ni, Se and W resulted in a more stable digestion performance.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Temperature had a differential effect on the structural and functional continuum in which the methanogenic food web operates, which may not only be a near-future scenario for rice paddies but also for natural wetlands in the tropics and subtropics.
Abstract: The expected increase in global surface temperature due to climate change may have a tremendous effect on the structure and function of the anaerobic food web in flooded rice field soil. Here, we used the metatranscriptomic analysis of total RNA to gain a system-level understanding of this temperature effect on the methanogenic food web. Mesophilic (30 °C) and thermophilic (45 °C) food web communities had a modular structure. Family-specific rRNA dynamics indicated that each network module represents a particular function within the food webs. Temperature had a differential effect on all the functional activities, including polymer hydrolysis, syntrophic oxidation of key intermediates, and methanogenesis. This was further evidenced by the temporal expression patterns of total bacterial and archaeal mRNA and of transcripts encoding carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes). At 30 °C, various bacterial phyla contributed to polymer hydrolysis, with Firmicutes decreasing and non-Firmicutes (e.g., Bacteroidetes, Ignavibacteriae) increasing with incubation time. At 45 °C, CAZyme expression was solely dominated by the Firmicutes but, depending on polymer and incubation time, varied on family level. The structural and functional community dynamics corresponded well to process measurements (acetate, propionate, methane). At both temperatures, a major change in food web functionality was linked to the transition from the early to late stage. The mesophilic food web was characterized by gradual polymer breakdown that governed acetoclastic methanogenesis (Methanosarcinaceae) and, with polymer hydrolysis becoming the rate-limiting step, syntrophic propionate oxidation (Christensenellaceae, Peptococcaceae). The thermophilic food web had two activity stages characterized first by polymer hydrolysis and followed by syntrophic oxidation of acetate (Thermoanaerobacteraceae, Heliobacteriaceae, clade OPB54). Hydrogenotrophic Methanocellaceae were the syntrophic methanogen partner, but their population structure differed between the temperatures. Thermophilic temperature promoted proliferation of a new Methanocella ecotype. Temperature had a differential effect on the structural and functional continuum in which the methanogenic food web operates. This temperature-induced change in food web functionality may not only be a near-future scenario for rice paddies but also for natural wetlands in the tropics and subtropics.

Journal ArticleDOI
Fan Bu1, Nanshi Dong1, Samir Kumar Khanal, Li Xie1, Qi Zhou1 
TL;DR: 5% (v/v) CO did not inhibit hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis during semi-continuous operation, and 83-97% CO conversion to CH4 was achieved, and Methanothermobacter thermoautotrophicus was the dominant methanogen at both temperatures and was the main functional archaea associated with CO biomethanation.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Dec 2018-Anaerobe
TL;DR: The results of this study support a hypothesis that explains the link between lower methane yields and larger populations of Sharpea and Kandleria in the rumens of sheep.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results derived from the current study indicated that microbial community manipulation is an efficient alternative method to speed up transition of UASB reactors from mesophilic to thermophilic conditions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is indicated that the submerged plant species are important parameters in the production of CH4 emissions in CWs and the proper arrangement of submerged plant breeders is vital to maximize the environmental benefit.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The analysis shows that the Artificial Neuron Network (ANN) is more accurate; moreover, it allows carrying out an optimization of the cumulative methane production.
Abstract: This work presents a critical analysis for three models group of methanogen potential prediction. The first group allows determination of the methane productivity of substrates, through three models (BMPthCOD, BMPthAtC and BMPthOFC). The BMPthCOD is suitable for a first approximation calculation. BMPthAtC and BMPthOFC are more accurate; however, require a complex characterization of substrates. The second models group predicts the cumulative methane production using seven models. The analysis shows that the Artificial Neuron Network (ANN) is more accurate; moreover, it allows carrying out an optimization of the cumulative methane production. The third group of models is particularly involved in the determination of daily flow of methane by a biodigester. The Hashimoto model, which uses the operating parameters, has been identified as the most suitable. Key words: Biochemical methane potential (BMP), anaerobic digestion, kinetics, methane production, artificial neuron network (ANN), substrate.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The high correlation between live/dead cell ratio and methane production suggests that the live/ dead cell ratio instead of the inhibition of methanogen might be the major cause for the halt of methane production at a magnesium chloride concentration of 50 g/L.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results suggest that increased levels of residual slurry have little impact on the dominant methanogenic or bacterial phylotypes, but large population sizes of these organisms may result in increased methane flux during the initial phases of storage.
Abstract: Microbial communities in residual slurry left after removal of stored liquid dairy manure have been presumed to increase methane emission during new storage, but these microbes have not been studied. While actual manure storage tanks are filled gradually, pilot- and farm-scale studies on methane emissions from such systems often use a batch approach. In this study, six pilot-scale outdoor storage tanks with (10% and 20%) and without residual slurry were filled (gradually or in batch) with fresh dairy manure, and methane and methanogenic and bacterial communities were studied during 120 days of storage. Regardless of filling type, increased residual slurry levels resulted in higher abundance of methanogens and bacteria after 65 days of storage. However, stronger correlation between methanogen abundance and methane flux was observed in gradually filled tanks. Despite some variations in the diversity of methanogens or bacteria with the presence of residual slurry, core phylotypes were not impacted. In all samples, the phylum Firmicutes predominated (∼57 to 70%) bacteria: >90% were members of Clostridia. Methanocorpusculum dominated (∼57 to 88%) archaeal phylotypes, while Methanosarcina gradually increased with storage time. During peak flux of methane, Methanosarcina was the major player in methane production. The results suggest that increased levels of residual slurry have little impact on the dominant methanogenic or bacterial phylotypes, but large population sizes of these organisms may result in increased methane flux during the initial phases of storage. IMPORTANCE Methane is the major greenhouse gas emitted from stored liquid dairy manure. Residual slurry left after removal of stored manure from tanks has been implicated in increasing methane emissions in new storages, and well-adapted microbial communities in it are the drivers of the increase. Linking methane flux to the abundance, diversity, and activity of microbial communities in stored slurries with different levels of residual slurry can help to improve the mitigation strategy. Mesoscale and lab-scale studies conducted so far on methane flux from manure storage systems used batch-filled tanks, while the actual condition in many farms involves gradual filling. Hence, this study provides important information toward determining levels of residual slurry that result in significant reduction of well-adapted microbial communities prior to storage, thereby reducing methane emissions from manure storage tanks filled under farm conditions.