Abstract

In the ferruginous and anoxic early Earth oceans, photoferrotrophy drove most of the biological production before the advent of oxygenic photosynthesis, but its association with ferric iron (Fe3+) dependent anaerobic methane (CH4) oxidation (AOM) has been poorly investigated. We studied AOM in Kabuno Bay, a modern analogue to the Archean Ocean (anoxic bottom waters and dissolved Fe concentrations > 600 µmol L−1). Aerobic and anaerobic CH4 oxidation rates up to 0.12 ± 0.03 and 51 ± 1 µmol L−1 d−1, respectively, were put in evidence. In the Fe oxidation–reduction zone, we observed high concentration of Bacteriochlorophyll e (biomarker of the anoxygenic photoautotrophs), which co-occurred with the maximum CH4 oxidation peaks, and a high abundance of Candidatus Methanoperedens, which can couple AOM to Fe3+ reduction. In addition, comparison of measured CH4 oxidation rates with electron acceptor fluxes suggest that AOM could mainly rely on Fe3+ produced by photoferrotrophs. Further experiments specifically targeted to investigate the interactions between photoferrotrophs and AOM would be of considerable interest. Indeed, ferric Fe3+-driven AOM has been poorly envisaged as a possible metabolic process in the Archean ocean, but this can potentially change the conceptualization and modelling of metabolic and geochemical processes controlling climate conditions in the Early Earth.

Highlights

  • Tropical inland waters and wetlands have been recognized as major sources of methane ­(CH4) to the a­ tmosphere[1]

  • ­SO42− abundance is typically much lower in freshwaters compared to marine ecosystems, so that ­CH4 oxidation in anoxic hypolimnion or sediments of lakes might be linked to the reduction of thermodynamically more favorable electron acceptors such as nitrite ­(NO2−)[6], nitrate ­(NO3−)[7], manganese IV ­(Mn4+) and ferric iron ­(Fe3+)[8]

  • Llirós et al.[11] reported the occurrence of a active pelagic Fe cycle driven by photoferrotrophy in Kabuno Bay, with little net Fe oxidation, meaning that Fe reduction processes are tightly coupled to photoferrotrophic Fe oxidation

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Summary

Introduction

Tropical inland waters and wetlands have been recognized as major sources of methane ­(CH4) to the a­ tmosphere[1].

Results
Conclusion
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