Roles of Microbes in Environmental Control Microbial Communities and Global Change Milton Saier
Jan 06, 2016
Roles of Microbes in Environmental
ControlMicrobial Communities
and Global Change
Milton Saier
The 3-Domain System
Based on ribosomal RNA gene sequences
The “crown group” of Eukaryotes includes animals, plants, fungi and multicellular algae
Almost all life is microbial!
The diversity of microorganisms is vast
Microbial CommunitiesFantastically diverse:
Thousands of bacterial species are present in a gram of soil.
Most have never been isolated in a laboratory.
They are not well understood.
Control global (and local) biogeochemistry:
Most steps in the C, N, S cycles are performed exclusively by prokaryotes (including trace gas production).
Decomposition is dominated by microorganisms (bacteria and fungi).
Photosynthesis: ~half of Earth’s primary production of carbon is by cyanobacteria and algae. Plants and algae use cyanobacterial photosynthesis because chloroplasts evolved from cyanobacteria.
Species-specific interactions with plants, animals and fungi:
Mutualisms (mycorrhizae, nitrogen fixers); Parasitisms (diseases).
Possible Microbial feedbacks in global change
CO2
increase
Warming
Microbial Respiration
+
Nutrient mineralization
Plant growth_
Microbial trace gas production
+
Plant community change ?
+_
Red = positive feedback (destabilizing)
Green = negative feedback (stabilizing)
Purple = uncertain
About 300 ppb in the atmosphere.
Strong greenhouse gas: 200X worse than CO2.
Lifetime = 150 years.
Contributes to stratospheric ozone depletion (after conversion to NO, nitric oxide).
Nitrous oxide (N2O)
Methane (CH4)
About 1.7 ppm in atmosphere.
Strong greenhouse gas. About 25 times worse than CO2.
Important in ozone chemistry.
Elevated atmospheric CO2
NOx in fossil fuel emissions
However, N2O concentrations now increase ~0.3%/year.
Clean air act
Atmospheric methane is increasing in the industrial age…
But why?
CO2
CH4 (methane)
Organic C
(aerobic) (anaerobic)
Methanogenesis (methane synthesis)
Methanotrophy (methane oxidation)
respirationC fixation*
*- primary production, i.e. photosynthesis, chemoautotrophy, nonphotosynthetic CO2 fixation.
Methanococcus jannaschii
Methanopyrus sp.
Methanogens (Archaea)
Trichonympha, a symbiotic protist (a flagelated protozoan) in the termite gut. It possesses its own symbiotic methanogens (archaea) which break down cellulose and produce nutrients + methane.
It also has spirochetes embedded in the outer leaflet of its membrane which confers coordinated motility to the host. It is not known if Trichonympha directs the motility of the spirochete, or if the spirochetes coordinate their motility themselves to move the Trichonympha (“teardrops with wigs”).
More symbiotic termite gut protists are present in termites: the flagellated protozoans Dynenympha and Microjoenia. They contain their own symbiotic methanogens.
Termite gut epithelium with symbiotic methanogens (E)
(Units are 1012g/year)
Global N cycle
N2 NH4+
NO2-NO3
-
N2O Organic N (N2O, NO)
anaerobic
aerobic
Nitrogen fixation
nitrite oxidation(nitrification)
ammonium oxidation(nitrification)
denitrification
(by-products of nitrification)
Simplified Nitrogen cycle
Nitrosococcus
Nitrosomonas
Nitrosolobus
Nitrosospira
Nitrospinanitrifiers
Methane production in rice paddies
Rice paddies:
Projected to increase by 70% in the next 25 years.
Anaerobic: rich in organic C – leads to methane production.
Some oxidation occurs due to the presence of O2 conducted by the rice plants into the rhizosphere.
Effects of N fertilizers:
They STIMULATE plant and methanogen growth. This STIMULATES methane production.
They also INHIBIT methane oxidation (in most studies of upland rice and other ecosystems…). This also STIMULATES methane production.
NO3-NH3 N2O
N2O
Agriculture and Nitrous oxide
“leaky pipe” model
More N fertilization leads to more NOx emissions
Eutrophication
Nitrogen and phosphorous nutrients lead to blooms; the oxygen is used up; algae decompose, and fish suffocate.
Effects of fertilizer runoff on denitrification in coastal areas
Off the coast of India during monsoon season:
N in runoff causes eutrophication of coastal waters.
Lower oxygen leads to fish kills and increased biological pollution.
Lower oxygen also leads to increased rates of denitrification.
This may eventually lead to nitrogen deficiency.
Insufficient N may result in stunted aquatic plant growth.
Unavailability of nutrients can then prevent fish reproduction.
(Naqvi et al. 2000)
Hypothesized denitrification effects on global climate after the last glacial
maximum (~22,000 ya)
High denitrification rates in ocean
Lower NO3- in marine environments
Lower plant production rates in the oceans
Slower CO2 removal by ocean
Climate warms
Beneficial Bacterial Bioprocessing1, Photosynthesis2, N2 Fixation3, Symbioses4, Gut nutrition5, Probiotics; prebiotics6, C, N, S, P cycles7, Mineralization/demineralization8, Denitrification9, Waste decomposition10, Methane oxidation 11, Food production12, Biofuel production13, Diverse, interesting and entertaining14, Human population control?
Quiz
1, Please name and describe four distinct processes that bacteria catalyze that affect our biosphere in a beneficialway.
2, Termites have endosymbionts with endosymbionts within them. Please explain in general terms what these three (or four) types of organisms are, what they do for the termite, and how they affect the biosphere.
3, Please show or describe how denitrification is believed to affect global warming.
4, Please describe what “living in a McDonald’s society”means, and what the consequences to people and the environment are.