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Metabolic stratification driven by surface and subsurface interactions in a terrestrial mud volcano
Authors:Ting-Wen Cheng  Yung-Hsin Chang  Sen-Lin Tang  Ching-Hung Tseng  Pei-Wen Chiang  Kai-Ti Chang  Chih-Hsien Sun  Yue-Gau Chen  Hung-Chi Kuo  Chun-Ho Wang  Pao-Hsuan Chu  Sheng-Rong Song  Pei-Ling Wang  Li-Hung Lin
Affiliation:1.Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan;2.Biodiversity Research Center, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan;3.Exploration and Development Research Institute, CPC Corporation Taiwan, Miao-Li, Taiwan;4.Department of Atmospheric Sciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan;5.Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan;6.Institute of Oceanography, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan
Abstract:Terrestrial mud volcanism represents the prominent surface geological feature, where fluids and hydrocarbons are discharged along deeply rooted structures in tectonically active regimes. Terrestrial mud volcanoes (MVs) directly emit the major gas phase, methane, into the atmosphere, making them important sources of greenhouse gases over geological time. Quantification of methane emission would require detailed insights into the capacity and efficiency of microbial metabolisms either consuming or producing methane in the subsurface, and establishment of the linkage between these methane-related metabolisms and other microbial or abiotic processes. Here we conducted geochemical, microbiological and genetic analyses of sediments, gases, and pore and surface fluids to characterize fluid processes, community assemblages, functions and activities in a methane-emitting MV of southwestern Taiwan. Multiple lines of evidence suggest that aerobic/anaerobic methane oxidation, sulfate reduction and methanogenesis are active and compartmentalized into discrete, stratified niches, resembling those in marine settings. Surface evaporation and oxidation of sulfide minerals are required to account for the enhanced levels of sulfate that fuels subsurface sulfate reduction and anaerobic methanotrophy. Methane flux generated by in situ methanogenesis appears to alter the isotopic compositions and abundances of thermogenic methane migrating from deep sources, and to exceed the capacity of microbial consumption. This metabolic stratification is sustained by chemical disequilibria induced by the mixing between upward, anoxic, methane-rich fluids and downward, oxic, sulfate-rich fluids.
Keywords:metabolic stratification   terrestrial mud volcano   sulfate-to-methane transition zone   methanogenesis   16S rRNA gene clone library   metagenome
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