土壤微生物作为大气微量气体(H2、CO、CH4、OCS、N2O和NO)的控制者。

R. Conrad
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引用次数: 1525

摘要

土壤的生产和消耗过程促进了与大气化学和气候相关的许多微量气体(CH4、CO、OCS、H2、N2O和NO)的全球循环。土壤微生物过程对大气微量气体的收支有很大贡献。土壤和大气之间的微量气体通量通常是土壤中生产和消耗过程同时进行的结果,相关过程尚未得到绝对肯定的证明,但微量气体消耗可能有以下几种:非离子型土壤酶H2氧化;硝化菌单氧化铵酶对CO的氧化作用利用甲烷生长的未知甲烷营养细菌氧化甲烷;含碳酸酐酶细菌对OCS的水解研究反硝化菌将N2O还原为N2;在异养细菌中通过还原成N2O或氧化成硝酸盐来消耗NO。与高地土壤相比,湿地土壤通常是缺氧的,因此支持厌氧细菌(如发酵菌、产甲烷菌、产醋酸菌、硫酸盐还原剂和反硝化菌)产生微量气体(H2、CO、CH4、N2O和NO)。甲烷是有机物厌氧降解的主要气体产物,释放到大气中,而其他微量气体只是中间产物,它们大多在缺氧栖息地内循环。产生的甲烷有很大一部分在缺氧-缺氧界面(如土壤表面和水生植物根表面)被甲烷营养细菌氧化,这些界面是湿地土壤输送O2和输送CH4的管道。旱地土壤的主要生产过程与湿地土壤不同,主要包括生物固氮生产H2、土壤有机质化学分解生产CO以及硝化和反硝化生产NO和N2O。旱地土壤中产生CH4的过程是完全不清楚的,OCS的生产过程也是如此。未来研究的一个问题是微量气体代谢过程的归属不仅是微生物的功能群,而且是特定的分类群。因此,在生态系统水平上,微生物多样性对控制微量气体通量的重要性是完全不清楚的。然而,不同的微生物群落可能是造成微量气体代谢差异的部分原因,例如氮肥对土壤吸收CH4的影响;CH4产率随温度降低而降低;或在不同土壤和不同条件下产生NO和N2O的不同速率和方式。
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Soil microorganisms as controllers of atmospheric trace gases (H2, CO, CH4, OCS, N2O, and NO).
Production and consumption processes in soils contribute to the global cycles of many trace gases (CH4, CO, OCS, H2, N2O, and NO) that are relevant for atmospheric chemistry and climate. Soil microbial processes contribute substantially to the budgets of atmospheric trace gases. The flux of trace gases between soil and atmosphere is usually the result of simultaneously operating production and consumption processes in soil: The relevant processes are not yet proven with absolute certainty, but the following are likely for trace gas consumption: H2 oxidation by abiontic soil enzymes; CO cooxidation by the ammonium monooxygenase of nitrifying bacteria; CH4 oxidation by unknown methanotrophic bacteria that utilize CH4 for growth; OCS hydrolysis by bacteria containing carbonic anhydrase; N2O reduction to N2 by denitrifying bacteria; NO consumption by either reduction to N2O in denitrifiers or oxidation to nitrate in heterotrophic bacteria. Wetland soils, in contrast to upland soils are generally anoxic and thus support the production of trace gases (H2, CO, CH4, N2O, and NO) by anaerobic bacteria such as fermenters, methanogens, acetogens, sulfate reducers, and denitrifiers. Methane is the dominant gaseous product of anaerobic degradation of organic matter and is released into the atmosphere, whereas the other trace gases are only intermediates, which are mostly cycled within the anoxic habitat. A significant percentage of the produced methane is oxidized by methanotrophic bacteria at anoxic-oxic interfaces such as the soil surface and the root surface of aquatic plants that serve as conduits for O2 transport into and CH4 transport out of the wetland soils. The dominant production processes in upland soils are different from those in wetland soils and include H2 production by biological N2 fixation, CO production by chemical decomposition of soil organic matter, and NO and N2O production by nitrification and denitrification. The processes responsible for CH4 production in upland soils are completely unclear, as are the OCS production processes in general. A problem for future research is the attribution of trace gas metabolic processes not only to functional groups of microorganisms but also to particular taxa. Thus, it is completely unclear how important microbial diversity is for the control of trace gas flux at the ecosystem level. However, different microbial communities may be part of the reason for differences in trace gas metabolism, e.g., effects of nitrogen fertilizers on CH4 uptake by soil; decrease of CH4 production with decreasing temperature; or different rates and modes of NO and N2O production in different soils and under different conditions.
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