THE ROLE OF METHANE-AND AMMONIA-OXIDIZING BACTERIA IN THE EMISSION OF GREEHOUSE GASES FROM AGRICULTURAL SOILS

Principal Investigator:
Lisa Y. Stein
Assistant Professor
Department of Environmental Sciences
University of California

Riverside, CA

Duration of the Project: 2 years

Project Summary

The proposed project is significant to the mission of the Kearney Foundation by assessing the roles of soils, microorganisms, management strategies, and nutrient availability in the flux of carbon-based and other greenhouse gases into and out of soils. The goal of the proposed research is to determine the physiological mechanism of greenhouse gas production by methane-oxidizing bacteria (MOB) and ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB) in agricultural soils by 1) characterizing the physiological responses of pure cultures to changes in CH4, NH3, NO2, and O2 concentrations, 2) developing molecular tools for quantifying changes in populations of MOB, AOB, and their functional genes, and 3) applying both the physiology and molecular tools developed above to soil microcosms to assess how MOB and AOB respond within a soil matrix when perturbed by changes in nutrient composition. Objective 1 will be accomplished by assaying the production or consumption of CH4, CO2, and N2O by known numbers of MOB or AOB provided with the appropriate substrates. In objective 2, we will use web-based tools to develop specific molecular probes for conducting real-time quantitative PCR, and we will test them with pure cultures. Objective 3 will combine the data and methodologies from objectives 1 and 2 to analyze both the physiology and populations of MOB, AOB and their functional genes within soil microcosms. Here, we wish to correlate changes in greenhouse gas flux with specific gene populations and changes in nutrient composition in soils. We expect to observe increases in MOB or AOB populations when they are provided with their preferred metabolic substrate. Decreases or changes in populations are expected when co-substrates compete with the preferred substrates for access to metabolic enzymes, or when a toxic agent is detected. The populations of functional genes should correlate with measured changes in gas composition as predicted from the characterized physiology of the MOB and AOB cultures.