Abstract

A novel stable isotope titration approach was developed to determine the contributions to total methane production made by CO 2 reduction and the disproportionation of acetate in anoxic environments. 13CH 4, 12CH 4, 13CO 2 and 12CO 2 production rates were measured in the head space of replicate anaerobic microcosms titrated with increasing amounts of 13C-labelled substrates. The contribution of CO 2 reduction was calculated from the linear relationship between ratios of labelled and total CH 4 production and ratios of labelled and total CO 2 after the addition of 13C-bicarbonate. In the case of acetoclastic methanogenesis rates of 13CH 4 and 12CH 4 production were fitted to a model based on an assumption that the relationship between the concentration of 13C-labelled acetate and the rates of labelled and unlabelled methane production followed Michaelis–Menten kinetics. A comparison of the raw data with the model supported the assumption and provided both an estimate of the contribution of acetate to methane production and an estimate of the size of the indigenous acetate pool without the need to measure acetate directly. The method was applied to a freshwater sediment in the English Lake District where it was found that 66.3% (se 4.9) of methane production was due to acetate disproportionation and 28.9% (se 1.9) of methane production resulted from CO 2 reduction. This is in agreement with theoretical predictions and other empirical measurements of methanogenesis.

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