Abstract
Permeable (sandy) sediments cover half of the continental margin and are major regulators of oceanic carbon cycling. The microbial communities within these highly dynamic sediments frequently shift between oxic and anoxic states, and hence are less stratified than those in cohesive (muddy) sediments. A major question is, therefore, how these communities maintain metabolism during oxic–anoxic transitions. Here, we show that molecular hydrogen (H2) accumulates in silicate sand sediments due to decoupling of bacterial fermentation and respiration processes following anoxia. In situ measurements show that H2 is 250-fold supersaturated in the water column overlying these sediments and has an isotopic composition consistent with fermentative production. Genome-resolved shotgun metagenomic profiling suggests that the sands harbour diverse and specialized microbial communities with a high abundance of [NiFe]-hydrogenase genes. Hydrogenase profiles predict that H2 is primarily produced by facultatively fermentative bacteria, including the dominant gammaproteobacterial family Woeseiaceae, and can be consumed by aerobic respiratory bacteria. Flow-through reactor and slurry experiments consistently demonstrate that H2 is rapidly produced by fermentation following anoxia, immediately consumed by aerobic respiration following reaeration and consumed by sulfate reduction only during prolonged anoxia. Hydrogenotrophic sulfur, nitrate and nitrite reducers were also detected, although contrary to previous hypotheses there was limited capacity for microalgal fermentation. In combination, these experiments confirm that fermentation dominates anoxic carbon mineralization in these permeable sediments and, in contrast to the case in cohesive sediments, is largely uncoupled from anaerobic respiration. Frequent changes in oxygen availability in these sediments may have selected for metabolically flexible bacteria while excluding strict anaerobes.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1014-1023 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Nature Microbiology |
Volume | 4 |
Issue number | 6 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Jun 2019 |
Funding
This study was funded by an ARC Discovery Project (DP180101762; awarded to P.L.M.C. and C.G.), an ARC DECRA Fellowship (DE170100310; awarded to C.G.) and an ARC Laureate Fellowship (FL150100038; awarded to P.H.). Y.-J.C. was supported by PhD scholarships from Monash University and the Taiwan Ministry of Education. We thank T. Röckmann for supporting the isotope fractionation work, R. Glud for helpful discussions that led to the conception of this project, and K. Handley and M. Mußmann for their helpful insights. We also acknowledge V. Eate, D. Brehm, L. Stoop, T. Jirapanjawat, S. Davy-Prefumo, S. Bay, R. Pierson and M. Raveggi for providing field and technical support.