109061 Effects of Clay Content and Plant Litter Quality on Methanogen Community Composition and Functional Gene Abundance in Natural and Restored Tidal Freshwater Wetland Soils.
Poster Number 1238
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Chemistry
See more from this Session: Microbial Transformations of Minerals, Metals and Organic Matter: Impacts on Contaminant Dynamics and Carbon Storage Poster (includes student competition)
Abstract:
This study examined the effects of plant species (Phragmites australis and Peltandra virginica), soil texture (specifically clay content), and site history (natural or restored TFW) on methanogen community composition, gene abundance, and CH4emission. Soil samples from two TFWs – one natural and one restored – were used to construct anaerobic laboratory mesocosms. The restored TFW mesocosms were set up with plant leaf litter and soil texture treatments, while soils from the natural TFW were only subjected to leaf litter treatments. Methane emission was monitored for 9 weeks and mesocosms were destructively sampled after 14, 34, or 62 days of incubation. For each sample, we estimated archaeal, and methanogen gene abundance using quantitative PCR (qPCR), and whole community composition was characterized targeting the 16S rDNA v4 region.
Total methane production showed that the restored soil produced significantly more CH4 than the natural soil. In addition, total greenhouse gas emission was affected by leaf litter but not clay content. Based on methane emission data, we expect methanogen gene abundance to increase over time. However, we observed a decrease in overall archaeal DNA quantities over time, and we expect that this is because of a decline in methanogen community diversity.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Chemistry
See more from this Session: Microbial Transformations of Minerals, Metals and Organic Matter: Impacts on Contaminant Dynamics and Carbon Storage Poster (includes student competition)