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Trimethylamine and Organic Matter Additions Reverse Substrate Limitation Effects on the δ13C Values of Methane Produced in Hypersaline Microbial Mats
- Publication Year :
- 2014
- Publisher :
- American Society for Microbiology, 2014.
-
Abstract
- Methane production has been observed in a number of hypersaline environments, and it is generally thought that this methane is produced through the use of noncompetitive substrates, such as the methylamines, dimethylsulfide and methanol. Stable isotope measurements of the produced methane have also suggested that the methanogens are operating under conditions of substrate limitation. Here, substrate limitation in gypsum-hosted endoevaporite and soft-mat hypersaline environments was investigated by the addition of trimethylamine, a noncompetitive substrate for methanogenesis, and dried microbial mat, a source of natural organic matter. The δ 13 C values of the methane produced after amendments were compared to those in unamended control vials. At all hypersaline sites investigated, the δ 13 C values of the methane produced in the amended vials were statistically lower (by 10 to 71‰) than the unamended controls, supporting the hypothesis of substrate limitation at these sites. When substrates were added to the incubation vials, the methanogens within the vials fractionated carbon isotopes to a greater degree, resulting in the production of more 13 C-depleted methane. Trimethylamine-amended samples produced lower methane δ 13 C values than the mat-amended samples. This difference in the δ 13 C values between the two types of amendments could be due to differences in isotope fractionation associated with the dominant methane production pathway (or substrate used) within the vials, with trimethylamine being the main substrate used in the trimethylamine-amended vials. It is hypothesized that increased natural organic matter in the mat-amended vials would increase fermentation rates, leading to higher H 2 concentrations and increased CO 2 /H 2 methanogenesis.
- Subjects :
- Geologic Sediments
Methanogenesis
Inorganic chemistry
Allyl compound
Trimethylamine
Sulfides
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology
Methane
Gene Expression Regulation, Enzymologic
Microbial Ecology
chemistry.chemical_compound
Methylamines
Isotope fractionation
Organic matter
chemistry.chemical_classification
Carbon Isotopes
Ecology
Chemistry
Substrate (chemistry)
Carbon Dioxide
Allyl Compounds
Environmental chemistry
Isotope Labeling
Carbon dioxide
Food Science
Biotechnology
Hydrogen
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....78ecbfc4b32babf6fd3d2822c37b6d92