Soil carbon content and relative abundance of high affinity H2-oxidizing bacteria predict atmospheric H2 soil uptake activity better than soil microbial community composition

Publication date

2015-06-01

Authors

Khdhiri, Mondher
Hesse, Laura
Popa, Maria E.ISNI 0000000022958050
Quiza, Liliana
Lalonde, Isabelle
Meredith, Laura K.
Röckmann, ThomasORCID 0000-0002-6688-8968ISNI 0000000396155674
Constant, Philippe

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

taverne

Abstract

Soil-atmosphere exchange of H2 is controlled by gas diffusion and the microbial production and oxidation activities in soil. Among these parameters, the H2 oxidation activity catalyzed by soil microorganisms harboring high affinity hydrogenase is the most difficult variable to parameterize because it is influenced by many unknown edaphic factors that shape microbial community structure and function. Here we seek to formulate a model combining microbiological and physicochemical variables to predict the H2 oxidation rate (u) in soil. Soil sample replicates collected from a grassland and three forests exhibited different H2 oxidation potentials. We examined the microbial community structure based on ribotyping analysis, the relative abundance of high affinity H2-oxidizing bacteria (HOB) estimated by qPCR and soil physicochemical characteristics as predictors for u. A single linear regression parameterized by total carbon content and a multiple linear regression using total carbon content and HOB relative abundance in soil explained 66 and 92% of the variance in u, respectively. Microbial community composition based on 16S rRNA gene pyrosequencing profiles was not a reliable predictor for u. Indeed, we found that HOB are members of the rare biosphere, comprising less than 1% of total bacteria as estimated by qPCR. We confirmed this relationship of u with total carbon content and HOB by an independent soil survey of 14 samples collected from maize monocultures, grasslands, deciduous forests and larch plantations. Observations made from both soil surveys thus were combined to build a predictive model for u parameterized with total carbon content and HOB relative abundance. Our results show that molecular biogeochemistry is a potential approach to improve performance of classical H2 surface flux models which estimate u empirically without considering variation in HOB distribution and activity in soil.

Keywords

Gaseous exchanges, Hydrogen, Molecular biogeochemistry, Trace gas, Taverne, Soil Science, Microbiology

Citation

Khdhiri, M, Hesse, L, Popa, M E, Quiza, L, Lalonde, I, Meredith, L K, Röckmann, T & Constant, P 2015, 'Soil carbon content and relative abundance of high affinity H2-oxidizing bacteria predict atmospheric H2 soil uptake activity better than soil microbial community composition', Soil Biology and Biochemistry, vol. 85, pp. 1-9. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.02.030