Utilizing conductive materials for reducing methane emissions in postharvest paddy rice soil microcosms
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Publication date
2025-01-02ISSN
0048-9697
Abstract
Paddy fields are a major anthropogenic source of global methane (CH4) emissions, a powerful greenhouse gas (GHG). This study aimed at gaining insights of different organic and inorganic conductive materials (CMs) – biochar, fungal melanin, and magnetite – to mitigate CH4 emissions, and on their influence on key microbial populations, mimicking the postharvest season throughout the degradation of rice straw in microcosms under anaerobic conditions encompassing postharvest paddy rice soils from the Ebro Delta, Spain. Results showed that fungal melanin was the most effective CM, significantly reducing CH4 emissions by 29 %, while biochar amendment also reduced emissions by 10 %. Magnetite slightly increased CH4 production (3 %), but this result was non-significant compared to unamended control microcosms. All treatments (with and without CM) displayed the acetoclastic methanogenesis pathway according to isotopic signature of δ13C-CH4, δ13C-CO2 and δ2H-CH4. In the presence of CMs, the archaeal populations showed a major abundance of Methanobacteria, Methanosarcina, and Bathyarchaeia. Furthermore, linear discriminant analysis effect size (LefSe) revealed specific positive linkages between fungal melanin and electroactive bacteria like Geobacter, biochar with Clostridia, and magnetite with Thiobacillus, and specifically related with archaea, particularly Bathyarchaeia. Biochar may diversify volatile fatty acids (VFA) utilization leading to a final mitigation of cumulative CH4 emissions through complex microbial interactions in the later stages of incubation. In contrast, fungal melanin increased VFA production, while delaying CH4 production, and may have diverted the electron flow towards melanin quinone reduction, suppressing methanogenesis by oxidizing organic compounds. These results suggest that CMs might facilitate specific potential direct interspecies electron transfer (DIET) between syntrophic electroactive bacteria (i.e. Geobacter, Clostridia) and electroactive methanogens such as Methanosarcina and Methanobacteria, but also with alternative microbial populations with the potential for hampering methanogenesis in a certain extent.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Accepted version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
504 - Threats to the environment
Pages
47
Publisher
Elsevier
Is part of
Science of the Total Environment
Recommended citation
Medina-Armijo, Cristy, Belén Fernández, Yolanda Lucas, Miriam Guivernau, Joan Noguerol, Massimo Marchesi, Maite Martínez-Eixarch, Carles Alcaraz, Francesc X Prenafeta-Boldú, and Marc Viñas. 2025. “Utilizing Conductive Materials for Reducing Methane Emissions in Postharvest Paddy Rice Soil Microcosms.” The Science of the Total Environment 959 (January): 177941. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.177941.
Grant agreement number
MICIU/Programa Estatal de generación del conocimiento y fortalecimiento científico y tecnológico del sistema I+D+I y Programa Estatal de I+D+I orientada a los retos de la sociedad/PID2019-111572RB-I00/ES/Descifrando la función clave de la microbiota y el manejo del suelo en la dinámica del carbono en arrozales del Delta del Ebro/MiC-Rice
Program
Aigües Marines i Continentals
Sostenibilitat en Biosistemes
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- ARTICLES CIENTÍFICS [3467]
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/


