3997363

Pyrogenic black carbon suppresses microbial methane production by serving as a terminal electron acceptor

Date
March 20, 2024
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Methane (CH4) is the second most important greenhouse gas, 27 times as potent as CO2 and responsible for >30% of the current anthropogenic warming. Globally, more than half of the CH4 is produced microbially through methanogenesis. Pyrogenic black carbon possesses a considerable electron storage capacity (ESC) and can be an electron donor or acceptor for abiotic and microbial redox transformation. Using a wood-derived biochar as a model black carbon, we demonstrated that air-oxidized black carbon served as an electron acceptor to support anaerobic oxidation of organic substrates, thereby suppressing CH4 production. Black carbon-respiring bacteria were immediately active and outcompeted methanogens. Significant CH4 did not form until the bioavailable electron accepting capacity of the biochar was exhausted. An experiment with labeled acetate (13CH3COO) yielded 1:1 13CH4 and 12CO2 without biochar and predominantly 13CO2 with biochar, indicating biochar enabled anaerobic acetate oxidation at the expense of methanogenesis. Methanogens were enriched following acetate fermentation, but only in the absence of biochar. Electron balance shows that approximately half (~2.4 mmol/g) of biochar's ESC was utilized by the culture, corresponding to the portion of the ESC > +0.173 V (vs. SHE). These results provide a mechanistic basis for quantifying the climate impact of black carbon and developing ESC-based applications to reduce CH4 emissions from biogenic sources.

Speakers

Speaker Image for Danhui Xin
University of Delaware

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