Unless
I’m mistaken, I think this is one of the positive feedbacks
identied by Guy McPherson
Permafrost's
turn of the microbes
Study
reveals clues to how drowsy microbes in Arctic tundra change to
methane-makers as permafrost thaws
4
March, 2015
RICHLAND,
Wash. –
As the Arctic warms, tons of carbon locked away in Arctic tundra will
be transformed into the powerful greenhouse gases carbon dioxide and
methane, but scientists know little about how that transition takes
place. Now, scientists looking at microbes in different types of
Arctic soil have a new picture of life in permafrost that reveals
entirely new species and hints that subzero microbes might be active.
Such
information is key to prepare for the release of gigatons of methane,
which could set the Earth on a path to irreversible global warming.
Appearing in today's issue of Nature, the study will help researchers
better understand when and how frozen carbon might get converted into
methane.
The
results suggest how microbes survive in the subzero temperatures of
permafrost. "The microbes in permafrost are part of Earth's dark
matter. We know so little about them because the majority have never
been cultivated and their properties are unknown," said
microbiologist Janet Jansson of the Department of Energy's Pacific
Northwest National Laboratory.
"This work hints at the life strategies they use when they've
been frozen for thousands of years."
Tundra
tales
Permafrost,
the layer of Arctic ground that is always frozen, lies underneath a
layer that thaws and refreezes every year, which scientists call the
"active layer".
Permafrost
locks carbon away in vegetative matter. Microbes in the bog generate
methane from this carbon, but researchers aren't sure how the soil
microbes go from frozen to marshy methane producers.
"Estimates
are that permafrost stores between 780 and 1,400 gigatons of
terrestrial carbon. That's a huge reservoir," said Jansson.
"What happens when permafrost thaws and trapped carbon is
available for microbes?"
Previous
experiments by Jansson and collaborators have shown that thawing
frozen soil in the lab quickly leads to a burst of methane
production, along with a change in the community of microbes. For
this study, Jansson and colleagues wanted to examine how natural
thawing affected microbes in tundra transitioning from permafrost to
bog in the Arctic.
To
get an overall picture of how the communities transform from frozen
snoozers to bustling bacteria, they used a combination of molecular
tools collectively known as "omics". These tools revealed
the particular genes the microbes are equipped with, which genes they
turn on, and the proteins they wield that allow them to survive on
the resources around them.
To
do this, Jansson and colleagues explored permafrost, active layer,
and bog soil samples collected by researchers with the United States
Geological Survey. They identified microbial genes and their activity
with help from DOE's
Joint Genome Institute in
Walnut Creek CA. And they collaborated with scientists from several
universities, national laboratories and biotechnology companies to
identify proteins in the various soils. Beginning this research at
DOE's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Jansson completed the
analyses at DOE's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.
Life
in the cryosphere
Gene
information told the researchers which microbe species were present
in each layer, how closely they were related to each other and what
they could potentially be doing. They found an undiscovered diversity
of microbes in Arctic soils and were able to describe several
completely novel microbes in each type of soil.
Gene
activity and the presence of proteins, which are a microbe's tools
for living, indicated what the microbes were doing. For example, even
though the permafrost microbes lived at subzero temperatures and had
a lot of proteins for protection against freezing conditions, they
also wielded proteins that indicated they could move through the
soil, use iron for energy or live on methane.
Soil microbes in the active layer had other protein tools that would let them find nutrients in an environment that goes through cycles of freezing and thawing.
As
expected, the bog microbes showed gene activity and protein tools for
producing methane, and the team identified many species whose main
job is to make methane, called methanogens. However, the team was
surprised to find several brand new species of them. Methanogens, old
and new, took over the communities that lived in the bog.
"This
work provides the first demonstration of this combination of omics
tools to gain a more mechanistic understanding of life in permafrost
and the changes that occur during natural thaw," said Jansson.
"We know changes happen as permafrost turns into bog, but we
don't yet know the significance of these changes at a molecular
level."
This
work was primarily supported by the Department of Energy's Office of
Science, the United States Geological Survey and the Academy of
Finland.
Reference:
Jenni Hultman, Mark P. Waldrop, Rachel Mackelprang, Maude M. David,
Jack McFarland, Steven J. Blazewicz, Jennifer Harden, Merritt R.
Turetsky, A. David McGuire, Manesh B. Shah, Nathan C. VerBerkmoes,
Lang Ho Lee, Kostas Mavrommatis, Janet K. Jansson. Multi-omics of
permafrost, active layer and thermokarst bog soil microbiomes,
Nature, March 4, 2015,DOI:10.1038/nature14238.
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