Abstract

Climate change dramatically impacts Arctic and subarctic regions, inducing shifts in wetland nutrient regimes as a consequence of thawing permafrost. Altered hydrological regimes may drive changes in the dynamics of microbial mercury (Hg) methylation and bioavailability. Important knowledge gaps remain on the contribution of specific microbial groups to methylmercury (MeHg) production in wetlands of various trophic status. Here, we measured aqueous chemistry, potential methylation rates (kmeth), volatile fatty acid (VFA) dynamics in peat-soil incubations, and genetic potential for Hg methylation across a groundwater-driven nutrient gradient in an interior Alaskan fen. We tested the hypotheses that (1) nutrient inputs will result in increased methylation potentials, and (2) syntrophic interactions contribute to methylation in subarctic wetlands. We observed that concentrations of nutrients, total Hg, and MeHg, abundance of hgcA genes, and rates of methylation in peat incubations (kmeth) were highest near the groundwater input and declined downgradient. hgcA sequences near the input were closely related to those from sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB), methanogens, and syntrophs. Hg methylation in peat incubations collected near the input source (FPF2) were impacted by the addition of sulfate and some metabolic inhibitors while those down-gradient (FPF5) were not. Sulfate amendment to FPF2 incubations had higher kmeth relative to unamended controls despite no effect on kmeth from addition of the sulfate reduction inhibitor molybdate. The addition of the methanogenic inhibitor BES (25 mM) led to the accumulation of VFAs, but unlike molybdate, it did not affect Hg methylation rates. Rather, the concurrent additions of BES and molybdate significantly decreased kmeth, suggesting a role for interactions between SRB and methanogens in Hg methylation. The reduction in kmeth with combined addition of BES and molybdate, and accumulation of VFA in peat incubations containing BES, and a high abundance of syntroph-related hgcA sequences in peat metagenomes provide evidence for MeHg production by microorganisms growing in syntrophy. Collectively the results suggest that wetland nutrient regimes influence the activity of Hg methylating microorganisms and, consequently, Hg methylation rates. Our results provide key information about microbial Hg methylation and methylating communities under nutrient conditions that are expected to become more common as permafrost soils thaw.

Highlights

  • Methylmercury (MeHg) is a potent neurotoxic compound that bioaccumulates and biomagnifies in aquatic food webs (USEPA, 1997)

  • We examined an Alaskan fen to evaluate the effects of groundwater nutrient inputs on soil microbiome structure and microbial Hg methylation

  • Our results (1) connect nutrient inputs in northern peatlands to increased diversity and abundance of Hg methylating communities and increased Hg methylation potentials, and (2) document the role of syntrophic interactions in Hg methylation. This is the first study to pair activity measurements with hgcA sequencing through shotgun metagenomics to reveal the role of syntrophy in Hg methylation in the environment

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Methylmercury (MeHg) is a potent neurotoxic compound that bioaccumulates and biomagnifies in aquatic food webs (USEPA, 1997). The discovery of the hgcAB genes encoding for the Hg methylase and associated ferredoxin (Parks et al, 2013) has revealed that several additional guilds of anaerobic microorganisms can methylate Hg, including methanogens (Gilmour et al, 2013, 2018; Yu et al, 2013, 2018), fermenters (Gilmour et al, 2013) and syntrophs (Gilmour et al, 2013; Yu et al, 2018) This advancement has provided an important gene marker for identifying environments and microbial taxa with a potential for Hg methylation The contribution of newly identified methylating guilds to MeHg production in the environment remains to be demonstrated

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call