Abstract

Abstract. Volcanic and geothermal systems emit endogenous gases by widespread degassing from soils, including CH4, a greenhouse gas twenty-five times as potent as CO2. Recently, it has been demonstrated that volcanic or geothermal soils are not only a source of methane, but are also sites of methanotrophic activity. Methanotrophs are able to consume 10–40 Tg of CH4 a−1 and to trap more than 50% of the methane degassing through the soils. We report on methane microbial oxidation in the geothermally most active site of Pantelleria (Italy), Favara Grande, whose total methane emission was previously estimated at about 2.5 Mg a−1 (t a−1). Laboratory incubation experiments with three top-soil samples from Favara Grande indicated methane consumption values of up to 59.2 nmol g−1 soil d.w. h−1. One of the three sites, FAV2, where the highest oxidation rate was detected, was further analysed on a vertical soil profile, the maximum methane consumption was measured in the top-soil layer, and values greater than 6.23 nmol g−1 h−1 were still detected up to a depth of 13 cm. The highest consumption rate was measured at 37 °C, but a still detectable consumption at 80 °C (> 1.25 nmol g−1 h−1) was recorded. The soil total DNA extracted from the three samples was probed by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) using standard proteobacterial primers and newly designed verrucomicrobial primers, targeting the unique methane monooxygenase gene pmoA; the presence of methanotrophs was detected at sites FAV2 and FAV3, but not at FAV1, where harsher chemical–physical conditions and negligible methane oxidation were detected. The pmoA gene libraries from the most active site (FAV2) pointed to a high diversity of gammaproteobacterial methanotrophs, distantly related to Methylocaldum-Metylococcus genera, and the presence of the newly discovered acido-thermophilic Verrucomicrobia methanotrophs. Alphaproteobacteria of the genus Methylocystis were isolated from enrichment cultures under a methane-containing atmosphere at 37 °C. The isolates grow at a pH range of 3.5 to 8 and temperatures of 18–45 °C, and consume 160 nmol of CH4 h−1 mL−1 of culture. Soils from Favara Grande showed the largest diversity of methanotrophic bacteria detected until now in a geothermal soil. While methanotrophic Verrucomicrobia are reported as dominating highly acidic geothermal sites, our results suggest that slightly acidic soils, in high-enthalpy geothermal systems, host a more diverse group of both culturable and uncultivated methanotrophs.

Highlights

  • Methane plays an important role in the earth’s atmospheric chemistry and radiative balance, being the second most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide

  • The soil total DNA extracted from the three samples was probed by Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) using standard proteobacterial primers and newly designed verrucomicrobial primers, targeting the unique methane monooxygenase gene pmoA; the presence of methanotrophs was detected at sites FAV2 and FAV3, but not at FAV1, where harsher chemical–physical conditions and negligible methane oxidation were detected

  • Before the discovery of the methanotrophic Verrucomicrobia that are affiliated with the Methylacidiphilaceae family, known methanotrophic bacteria were taxonomically affiliated with the Proteobacteria phylum in the Gammaproteobacteria and Alphaproteobacteria classes

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Summary

Introduction

Methane plays an important role in the earth’s atmospheric chemistry and radiative balance, being the second most important greenhouse gas after carbon dioxide. Such a flux can be of biological origin (CH4 production in deeper anoxic layers) or of more deeper geogenic origin in areas rich in hydrocarbon reservoirs, or in geothermal/volcanic areas In these cases, the CH4 flux often exceeds the biologic oxidation capacity, and soils become a source of endogenous CH4 for the atmosphere (Cardellini et al, 2003; Castaldi and Tedesco, 2005; D’Alessandro et al, 2009, 2011; Etiope and Klusman, 2010). Soon after, a new group of obligately methanotrophic bacteria was isolated from different geothermal/volcanic sites and affiliated with the Verrucomicrobia phylum These new isolates thrive at very low pH (down to 0.8) and high temperatures (up to 60 ◦C optimal temperature), and may consume 10–90 % of the methane before its emission from soils (Pol et al, 2007; Islam et al, 2008; Dunfield et al, 2007). The RuBisCO pathway is used by Verrucomicrobia Methylacidiphilum fumarolicum to fix CO2 using CH4 as an energy source (Khadem et al, 2011)

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