Abstract
Vegetated coastal ecosystems (VCEs; i.e., mangroves, saltmarshes, and seagrasses) represent important sources of natural methane emission. Despite recent advances in the understanding of novel taxa and pathways associated with methanogenesis in these ecosystems, the key methanogenic players and the contribution of different substrates to methane formation remain elusive. Here, we systematically investigate the community and activity of methanogens using publicly available metatranscriptomes at a global scale together with our in-house metatranscriptomic dataset. Taxonomic profiling reveals that 13 groups of methanogenic archaea were transcribed in the investigated VCEs, and they were predominated by Methanosarcinales. Among these VCEs, methanogens exhibited all the three known methanogenic pathways in some mangrove sediments, where methylotrophic methanogens Methanosarcinales/Methanomassiliicoccales grew on diverse methyl compounds and coexisted with hydrogenotrophic (mainly Methanomicrobiales) and acetoclastic (mainly Methanothrix) methanogens. Contrastingly, the predominant methanogenic pathway in saltmarshes and seagrasses was constrained to methylotrophic methanogenesis. These findings reveal different archaeal methanogens in VCEs and suggest the potentially distinct methanogenesis contributions in these VCEs to the global warming.
Published Version
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