This study demonstrated the effectiveness of enriched anoxic methanotrophic consortium augmentation in reducing methane (CH) emissions from rice cultivation while improving soil fertility and rice productivity. The enriched consortium from cattle farm effluent, dominated by Acinetobacter (65.5%) and containing both types I (Methylosarcina, Methylomagnum, and Methyloversatilis) and II (Methylocystis) methanotrophs, exhibited high methane oxidation rates (V 45.70 ± 13.71 μmol-CH⋅g⋅h and K 16.50 ± 4.95 μM). The optimal inoculum size for soil application was 0.2 L⋅m (OD = 0.5), resulting in a CH reduction efficiency of 74.30 ± 3.56%. In rice pot experiments, the anoxic methanotrophic consortium with an inoculum size of 0.2 L⋅m reduced methane emissions by 79.32 ± 3.96% without fertilizer and 29.22 ± 1.45% and 46.81 ± 1.87% when combined with organic and chemical fertilizers, respectively. The field-scale evaluation revealed that combined soil and irrigation water application with anoxic methanotrophic consortium augmentation was the most effective, reducing seasonal methane emissions from 32.8 ± 4.2 to 9.3 ± 1.5 g-CH·m and methane flux from 15.2 ± 2.1 to 4.3 ± 0.8 mg-CH·m·h, representing a 71.7 ± 0.4% reduction. This method also increased plant height (6.5%) and tiller number (26.4%). The combined application method also resulted in the highest soil nutrient levels (96.1 mg-N·kg soil, 21.8 mg-P·kg soil, and 133.4 mg-K·kg soil) and increased rice yield by 14.7% (975 g⋅m). These findings demonstrate that anoxic methanotrophic consortium augmentation is a sustainable approach to mitigate methane emissions and improve rice productivity, emphasizing the importance of integrating this strategy into rice cultivation practices in rainfed lowland areas.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.124831 | DOI Listing |
J Environ Manage
March 2025
Biofuel and Biocatalysis Innovation Research Unit, Nakhonsawan Campus, Mahidol University, Nakhonsawan, 60130, Thailand. Electronic address:
This study demonstrated the effectiveness of enriched anoxic methanotrophic consortium augmentation in reducing methane (CH) emissions from rice cultivation while improving soil fertility and rice productivity. The enriched consortium from cattle farm effluent, dominated by Acinetobacter (65.5%) and containing both types I (Methylosarcina, Methylomagnum, and Methyloversatilis) and II (Methylocystis) methanotrophs, exhibited high methane oxidation rates (V 45.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGeobiology
March 2025
Fachbereich Erdsystemwissenschaften, Centrum für Erdsystemforschung und Nachhaltigkeit, Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
The microbially mediated replacement of sulfate-bearing evaporites by authigenic carbonate and native sulfur under anoxic conditions is poorly understood. Sulfur-bearing carbonates from the Monte Palco ridge (Sicily) replacing Messinian gypsum were therefore studied to better characterize the involved microorganisms. The lack of (1) sedimentary bedding, (2) lamination, and (3) significant water-column-derived lipid biomarkers in the secondary carbonates implies replacement after gypsum deposition (epigenesis).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Microbiol
February 2025
Department of Microbiology, Radboud Institute for Biological and Environmental Sciences, Radboud University, Nijmegen, the Netherlands.
Coastal ecosystems are increasingly exposed to high nutrient loads and salinity intrusions due to rising seawater levels. Microbial communities, key drivers of elemental cycles in these ecosystems, consequently, experience fluctuations. This study investigates how the methane-rich coastal sediment microbiome from the Stockholm Archipelago copes with high and low nitrogen and sulfide loading by simulating coastal conditions in two methane-saturated anoxic brackish bioreactors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMar Environ Res
March 2025
Chemical Oceanography Division, CSIR-National Institute of Oceanography, Dona Paula, Goa, 403004, India.
Despite its pelagic supersaturation and wide occurrence of gas-charged pockets in the sediments, methane occurs at unusually low concentrations in the shelf waters off Western Indian coast, even during euxinic events, compared to other anoxic coastal systems of the world. To understand the reason and benthic biogeochemistry of CH, we measured benthic CH flux rates through whole-core incubations, and carried out CH-spiked N-labeled incubations of the suboxic/anoxic shelf waters during 2011-2013. We observed very low rates of benthic CH influx or efflux (-0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFISME J
January 2024
LIENSs Littoral Environnement et Sociétés, UMRi 7266 CNRS-La Rochelle Université, La Rochelle, 17000, France.
Below their ice shells, icy moons may offer a source of chemical energy that could support microbial life in the absence of light. In the Arctic, past and present glacial retreat leads to isostatic uplift of sediments through which cold and methane-saturated groundwater travels. This fluid reaches the surface and freezes as hill-shaped icings during winter, producing dark ice-water interfaces above water ponds containing chemical energy sources.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!