Abstract
Annual glacier melting alters hydrothermal conditions of the foreland alpine meadows, and causes significant fluctuations in methane (CH4) flux. Previously we found that Tibetan glacier foreland alpine meadow shifts to CH4 source from sink during the melting season, but the potential mechanisms remain unclear. This study, via combination of in-situ measurement of seasonal CH4 flux and survey of microbial species that may involve in CH4 metabolism, explores the causes of glacier melting on CH4 flux in a glacier foreland alpine meadow on Tibetan Plateau. We determined a pronounced CH4 emission (13.95 μg·m−2·h−1) in August (melting season) but CH4 uptake in June (−3.76 μg·m−2·h−1) and October (−17.77 μg·m−2·h−1), and 1.4-fold higher soil moisture in August than the other two months. This showed a direct correlation of CH4 flux with glacier melting increased soil water. Additionally, glacier melting caused more CH4 fluxes increase in hollows than in hummocks. Amplicon sequencing determined 126-fold higher abundance of mcrA, the methanogenic marker gene, in August than in June and October, and a higher relative abundance of a fungal phylum Mortierellomycota and syntrophic bacteria that convert the fatty acids, the degradation intermediates of organic complexes to CO2 and acetate, the methanogenic substrates like in August. However, no seasonal variation of pmoA, the marker gene of aerobic methanotrophs, was observed. It appears that glacier melting promotes the CH4 producing but not the consuming microorganisms, thus leading to increased CH4 emission. The findings of this work indicate that global warming resulted glacier melting would increase global CH4 emissions, and in turn worsens global warming, so an alarming positive feedback loop.
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