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Chemolithotrophic processes in the bacterial communities on the surface of mineral-enriched biochars

Authors :
Jianli Wang
Shaun Nielsen
David R. G. Mitchell
Torsten Thomas
Joseph Horvat
Paul Munroe
Jun Ye
Scott W. Donne
Stephen Joseph
Mukan Ji
Source :
The ISME Journal. 11:1087-1101
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Biochar and mineral-enriched biochar (MEB) have been used as soil amendments to improve soil fertility, sequester carbon and mitigate greenhouse gas emissions. Such beneficial outcomes could be partially mediated by soil bacteria, however little is known about how they directly interact with biochar or MEB. We therefore analyzed the diversity and functions of bacterial communities on the surfaces of one biochar and two different MEBs after a 140-day incubation in soil. The results show that the biochar and the MEBs harbor distinct bacterial communities to the bulk soil. Communities on biochar and MEBs were dominated by a novel Gammaproteobacterium. Genome reconstruction combined with electron microscopy and high-resolution elemental analysis revealed that the bacterium generates energy from the oxidation of iron that is present on the surface. Two other bacteria belonging to the genus Thiobacillus and a novel group within the Oxalbacteraceae were enriched only on the MEBs and they had the genetic capacity for thiosulfate oxidation. All three surface-enriched bacteria also had the capacity to fix carbon dioxide, either in a potentially strictly autotrophic or mixotrophic manner. Our results show the dominance of chemolithotrophic processes on the surface of biochar and MEB that can contribute to carbon sequestration in soil.

Details

ISSN :
17517370 and 17517362
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The ISME Journal
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c84cd63a1a2ac2dff890f10dd02c512