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Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds

Ping Yang Orcid Logo, Kam Tang Orcid Logo, Chuan Tong, Derrick Y.F. Lai, Lianzuan Wu, Hong Yang, Linhai Zhang, Chen Tang, Yan Hong, Guanghui Zhao

Environmental Pollution, Volume: 305, Start page: 119276

Swansea University Author: Kam Tang Orcid Logo

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Abstract

Widespread conversion of coastal wetlands into aquaculture ponds in the Chinese coastal region often results in degradation of the wetland ecosystems, but its effects on sediment’s potential to produce greenhouse gases remain unclear. Using field sampling, incubation experiments and molecular analys...

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Published in: Environmental Pollution
ISSN: 0269-7491
Published: Elsevier BV 2022
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa59764
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Using field sampling, incubation experiments and molecular analysis, we studied the sediment CH4 production potential and the relevant microbial communities in a brackish marsh and the nearby aquaculture ponds in the Min River Estuary in southeastern China. Sediment CH4 production potential was higher in the summer and autumn months than in spring and winter months, and it was best correlated with sediment carbon content among all environmental variables. The mean sediment CH4 production potential in the aquaculture ponds (20.1 ng g&#x2013;1 d&#x2013;1) was significantly lower than that in the marsh (45.2 ng g&#x2013;1 d&#x2013;1). While Methanobacterium dominated in both habitats (41-59%), the overall composition of sediment methanogenic archaea communities differed significantly between the two habitats (p&lt;0.05) and methanogenic archaea alpha diversity was lower in the aquaculture ponds (p&lt;0.01). Network analysis revealed that interactions between sediment methanogenic archaea were much weaker in the ponds than in the marsh. 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spelling 2022-05-13T13:38:21.0064733 v2 59764 2022-04-05 Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds 69af43a3b9da24aef65c5d3a44956fe3 0000-0001-9427-9564 Kam Tang Kam Tang true false 2022-04-05 SBI Widespread conversion of coastal wetlands into aquaculture ponds in the Chinese coastal region often results in degradation of the wetland ecosystems, but its effects on sediment’s potential to produce greenhouse gases remain unclear. Using field sampling, incubation experiments and molecular analysis, we studied the sediment CH4 production potential and the relevant microbial communities in a brackish marsh and the nearby aquaculture ponds in the Min River Estuary in southeastern China. Sediment CH4 production potential was higher in the summer and autumn months than in spring and winter months, and it was best correlated with sediment carbon content among all environmental variables. The mean sediment CH4 production potential in the aquaculture ponds (20.1 ng g–1 d–1) was significantly lower than that in the marsh (45.2 ng g–1 d–1). While Methanobacterium dominated in both habitats (41-59%), the overall composition of sediment methanogenic archaea communities differed significantly between the two habitats (p<0.05) and methanogenic archaea alpha diversity was lower in the aquaculture ponds (p<0.01). Network analysis revealed that interactions between sediment methanogenic archaea were much weaker in the ponds than in the marsh. Overall, these findings suggest that conversion of marsh land to aquaculture ponds significantly altered the sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and diversity and lowered the sediment’s capacity to produce CH4. Journal Article Environmental Pollution 305 119276 Elsevier BV 0269-7491 Methane production; Methanogenic archaea; Network analysis; Land-use and land coverage change (LULCC); Coastal wetlands; Aquaculture systems 15 7 2022 2022-07-15 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119276 COLLEGE NANME Biosciences COLLEGE CODE SBI Swansea University Not Required 2022-05-13T13:38:21.0064733 2022-04-05T15:12:11.0922987 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences Ping Yang 0000-0002-5212-6065 1 Kam Tang 0000-0001-9427-9564 2 Chuan Tong 3 Derrick Y.F. Lai 4 Lianzuan Wu 5 Hong Yang 6 Linhai Zhang 7 Chen Tang 8 Yan Hong 9 Guanghui Zhao 10 59764__23775__99cd2d29e54a4004846ed8f6719bcc2a.pdf ENVPOL_authorsfinal.pdf 2022-04-05T15:19:28.7885820 Output 3071429 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2023-04-08T00:00:00.0000000 ©2022 All rights reserved. All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives License (CC-BY-NC-ND) true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
title Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
spellingShingle Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
Kam Tang
title_short Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
title_full Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
title_fullStr Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
title_full_unstemmed Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
title_sort Changes in sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and methane production potential following conversion of coastal marsh to aquaculture ponds
author_id_str_mv 69af43a3b9da24aef65c5d3a44956fe3
author_id_fullname_str_mv 69af43a3b9da24aef65c5d3a44956fe3_***_Kam Tang
author Kam Tang
author2 Ping Yang
Kam Tang
Chuan Tong
Derrick Y.F. Lai
Lianzuan Wu
Hong Yang
Linhai Zhang
Chen Tang
Yan Hong
Guanghui Zhao
format Journal article
container_title Environmental Pollution
container_volume 305
container_start_page 119276
publishDate 2022
institution Swansea University
issn 0269-7491
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.envpol.2022.119276
publisher Elsevier BV
college_str Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofscienceandengineering
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Science and Engineering
department_str School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Biosciences
document_store_str 1
active_str 0
description Widespread conversion of coastal wetlands into aquaculture ponds in the Chinese coastal region often results in degradation of the wetland ecosystems, but its effects on sediment’s potential to produce greenhouse gases remain unclear. Using field sampling, incubation experiments and molecular analysis, we studied the sediment CH4 production potential and the relevant microbial communities in a brackish marsh and the nearby aquaculture ponds in the Min River Estuary in southeastern China. Sediment CH4 production potential was higher in the summer and autumn months than in spring and winter months, and it was best correlated with sediment carbon content among all environmental variables. The mean sediment CH4 production potential in the aquaculture ponds (20.1 ng g–1 d–1) was significantly lower than that in the marsh (45.2 ng g–1 d–1). While Methanobacterium dominated in both habitats (41-59%), the overall composition of sediment methanogenic archaea communities differed significantly between the two habitats (p<0.05) and methanogenic archaea alpha diversity was lower in the aquaculture ponds (p<0.01). Network analysis revealed that interactions between sediment methanogenic archaea were much weaker in the ponds than in the marsh. Overall, these findings suggest that conversion of marsh land to aquaculture ponds significantly altered the sediment methanogenic archaea community structure and diversity and lowered the sediment’s capacity to produce CH4.
published_date 2022-07-15T04:17:19Z
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