AI Article Synopsis

  • Temperature significantly influences nearly all environmental processes, particularly microbial processes that produce methane (CH), a key greenhouse gas.
  • The review outlines how temperature impacts the kinetics and thermodynamics of these microbial processes, alters organic matter degradation pathways, and changes the makeup of microbial communities involved in methane production.
  • Notably, increasing temperatures shift the methanogenic pathway from acetate-based to hydrogen/CO-based methane production, with implications for methane production rates, which are primarily limited by methanogenic archaea rather than the breakdown of organic matter itself.

Article Abstract

There is virtually no environmental process that is not dependent on temperature. This includes the microbial processes that result in the production of CH, an important greenhouse gas. Microbial CH production is the result of a combination of many different microorganisms and microbial processes, which together achieve the mineralization of organic matter to CO and CH. Temperature dependence applies to each individual step and each individual microbe. This review will discuss the different aspects of temperature dependence including temperature affecting the kinetics and thermodynamics of the various microbial processes, affecting the pathways of organic matter degradation and CH production, and affecting the composition of the microbial communities involved. For example, it was found that increasing temperature results in a change of the methanogenic pathway with increasing contribution from mainly acetate to mainly H/CO as immediate CH precursor, and with replacement of aceticlastic methanogenic archaea by thermophilic syntrophic acetate-oxidizing bacteria plus thermophilic hydrogenotrophic methanogenic archaea. This shift is consistent with reaction energetics, but it is not obligatory, since high temperature environments exist in which acetate is consumed by thermophilic aceticlastic archaea. Many studies have shown that CH production rates increase with temperature displaying a temperature optimum and a characteristic apparent activation energy (). Interestingly, CH release from defined microbial cultures, from environmental samples and from wetland field sites all show similar values around 100 kJ mol indicating that CH production rates are limited by the methanogenic archaea rather than by hydrolysis of organic matter. Hence, the final rather than the initial step controls the methanogenic degradation of organic matter, which apparently is rarely in steady state.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10359720PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1232946DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

organic matter
16
temperature dependence
12
microbial processes
12
methanogenic archaea
12
temperature
8
production rates
8
microbial
7
methanogenic
6
production
5
complexity temperature
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!