Peatlands have acted as C-sinks for millennia, storing large amounts of carbon, of which a significant amount is yearly released as methane (CH). Sphagnum mosses are a key genus in many peat ecosystems and these mosses live in close association with methane-oxidizing and nitrogen-fixing microorganisms. To disentangle mechanisms which may control Sphagnum-associated methane-oxidation and nitrogen-fixation, we applied four treatments to Sphagnum mosses from a pristine peatland in Finland: nitrogen fertilization, phosphorus fertilization, CH addition and light. N and P fertilization resulted in nutrient accumulation in the moss tissue, but did not increase Sphagnum growth. While net CO fixation rates remained unaffected in the N and P treatment, net CH emissions decreased because of enhanced CH oxidation. CH addition did not affect Sphagnum performance in the present set-up. Light, however, clearly stimulated the activity of associated nitrogen-fixing and methane-oxidizing microorganisms, increasing N fixation rates threefold and CH oxidation rates fivefold. This underlines the strong connection between Sphagnum and associated N fixation and CH oxidation. It furthermore indicates that phototrophy is a strong control of microbial activity, which can be directly or indirectly.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7109220PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13568-020-00994-9DOI Listing

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