Abstract
Permafrost contains about50% of the global soil carbon1. It is thought that the thawing of permafrost can lead to a loss of soil carbon in the form of methane and carbon dioxide emissions2,3. The magnitude of the resulting positive climate feedback of such greenhouse gas emissions is still unknown3 and may to a large extent depend on the poorly understood role of microbial community composition in regulating the metabolic processes that drive such ecosystem-scale greenhouse gas fluxes. Here we show that changes in vegetation and increasing methane emissionswith permafrost thaware associated with a switch from hydrogenotrophic to partly acetoclasticmethanogenesis, resulting inalargeshift in theδ13Csignature (10-15%) of emitted methane. We used a natural landscape gradient of permafrost thawinnorthern Sweden4,5 as a model to investigate the role of microbial communities in regulatingmethane cycling, and to test whether a knowledge of community dynamics could improvepredictions of carbonemissions under loss of permafrost. Abundance of the meth anogen Candidatus 'Meth anoflorens stordalenmirensis'6 is a key predictor of the shifts in methane isotopes, which in turn predicts the proportions of carbon emitted as methane and as carbon dioxide, an important factor for simulating the climate feedback associated with permafrost thaw in global models3,7. By showing that the abundance of key microbial lineages can be used to predict atmospherically relevant patterns in methane isotopes and the proportion of carbonmetabolized to methane during permafrost thaw, we establish a basis for scaling changing microbial communities to ecosystem isotope dynamics. Our findings indicate that microbial ecology may be important in ecosystem-scale responses to global change.
Original language | English (US) |
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Pages (from-to) | 478-481 |
Number of pages | 4 |
Journal | Nature |
Volume | 514 |
Issue number | 7253 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Oct 23 2014 |
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- General