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1 December 2006 CONTROL OF ORGANIC CARBON MINERALIZATION BY ALTERNATIVE ELECTRON ACCEPTORS IN FOUR PEATLANDS, CENTRAL NEW YORK STATE, USA
Mark D. Dettling, Joseph B. Yavitt, Stephen H. Zinder
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Abstract

Terminal mineralization of organic carbon (C) in northern peat soils usually produces more carbon dioxide (CO2) than methane (CH4), but the maintenance of microbial CO2 production is unclear. Carbon dioxide production relies on oxygen (O2) or alternative (to O2) electron acceptors (NO3, Fe(III), SO42−). We examined rates of CO2 production and CH4 production in peat soils from two ombrotrophic bogs and two minerotrophic fens incubated in vitro with and without added glucose (an electron donor) and added electron acceptors. Soil interstitial water had dissolved NO3 (2–17 µmol L−1) in three sites, and SO42− (2–20 µmol L−1) and Fe(III) (0.02–0.8 µmol L−1) in all four sites. Peat soils incubated in vitro without added glucose or electron acceptors had rates of CH4 production between 0.2 and 1.5 µmol g−1 day−1 and rates of CO2 production between 8 and 17 µmol g−1 day−1. Added glucose increased CO2 production in all of the peat soils, although adding an electron acceptor with glucose had no additional impact in the bogs. Nitrate plus glucose had the largest increase in CO2 production in both fens, and SO42− plus glucose enhanced CO2 production in one fen. Added glucose alone or with O2 or Fe increased CH4 production in peat soil from the two bogs, whereas glucose plus SO42− or NO3 inhibited CH4 production. Glucose plus an electron acceptor inhibited CH4 production in the forest fen but enhanced CH4 production in sedge fen. Terminal electron acceptors did not universally divert C and electron flow away from CH4 production and towards CO2 production in these peat soils, and thus maintenance of CO2 production is still uncertain, with no single explanation likely.

Mark D. Dettling, Joseph B. Yavitt, and Stephen H. Zinder "CONTROL OF ORGANIC CARBON MINERALIZATION BY ALTERNATIVE ELECTRON ACCEPTORS IN FOUR PEATLANDS, CENTRAL NEW YORK STATE, USA," Wetlands 26(4), 917-927, (1 December 2006). https://doi.org/10.1672/0277-5212(2006)26[917:COOCMB]2.0.CO;2
Received: 18 August 2005; Accepted: 1 August 2006; Published: 1 December 2006
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KEYWORDS
anaerobic metabolism
bog
CO2 production
fen
Methanogenesis
peat soil
terminal metabolism
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