Aquatic and terrestrial cyanobacteria produce methane
Author(s) -
Mina Bižić,
Thomas Klintzsch,
Danny Ionescu,
Muna Hindiyeh,
Marco Günthel,
Alicia M. MuroPastor,
Werner Eckert,
Tim Urich,
Frank Keppler,
HansPeter Grossart
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aax5343
Subject(s) - cyanobacteria , environmental science , methane , terrestrial plant , ecology , aquatic ecosystem , aquatic plant , terrestrial ecosystem , biology , ecosystem , bacteria , macrophyte , genetics
Evidence is accumulating to challenge the paradigm that biogenic methanogenesis, considered a strictly anaerobic process, is exclusive to archaea. We demonstrate that cyanobacteria living in marine, freshwater, and terrestrial environments produce methane at substantial rates under light, dark, oxic, and anoxic conditions, linking methane production with light-driven primary productivity in a globally relevant and ancient group of photoautotrophs. Methane production, attributed to cyanobacteria using stable isotope labeling techniques, was enhanced during oxygenic photosynthesis. We suggest that the formation of methane by cyanobacteria contributes to methane accumulation in oxygen-saturated marine and limnic surface waters. In these environments, frequent cyanobacterial blooms are predicted to further increase because of global warming potentially having a direct positive feedback on climate change. We conclude that this newly identified source contributes to the current natural methane budget and most likely has been producing methane since cyanobacteria first evolved on Earth.
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