Top consumer abundance influences lake methane efflux
Devlin, S., Saarenheimo, J., Syväranta, J., & Jones, R. (2015). Top consumer abundance influences lake methane efflux. Nature Communications, 6, Article 8787. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms9787
Published in
Nature CommunicationsDate
2015Copyright
© 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. This is an open access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Lakes are important habitats for biogeochemical cycling of carbon. The organization and
structure of aquatic communities influences the biogeochemical interactions between lakes
and the atmosphere. Understanding how trophic structure regulates ecosystem functions and
influences greenhouse gas efflux from lakes is critical to understanding global carbon cycling
and climate change. With a whole-lake experiment in which a previously fishless lake was
divided into two treatment basins where fish abundance was manipulated, we show how a
trophic cascade from fish to microbes affects methane efflux to the atmosphere. Here, fish
exert high grazing pressure and remove nearly all zooplankton. This reduction in zooplankton
density increases the abundance of methanotrophic bacteria, which in turn reduce CH4 efflux
rates by roughly 10 times. Given that globally there are millions of lakes emitting methane,
an important greenhouse gas, our findings that aquatic trophic interactions significantly
influence the biogeochemical cycle of methane has important implications.
...
Publisher
Nature Publishing GroupISSN Search the Publication Forum
2041-1723Keywords
Publication in research information system
https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/25272028
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as © 2015 Macmillan Publishers Limited. This is an open access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Related items
Showing items with similar title or keywords.
-
Food-web complexity, consumer behavior, and diet specialism: impacts on ecosystem stability
Perälä, Tommi; Kuisma, Mikael; Uusi-Heikkilä, Silva; Kuparinen, Anna (Springer Nature, 2024)Ecological stability is a fundamental aspect of food web dynamics. In this study, we explore the factors influencing stability in complex ecological networks, characterizing it through biomass oscillations and species ... -
A comparison of the impacts of introduced signal crayfish and native noble crayfish in boreal lake ecosystems
Ercoli, Fabio (University of Jyväskylä, 2014) -
Ecosystem responses to increased organic carbon concentration : comparing results based on long-term monitoring and whole-lake experimentation
Kankaala, Paula; Arvola, Lauri; Hiltunen, Minna; Huotari, Jussi; Jones, Roger I.; Nykänen, Hannu; Ojala, Anne; Olin, Mikko; Peltomaa, Elina; Peura, Sari; Rask, Martti; Tulonen, Tiina; Vesala, Sami (Taylor & Francis, 2019)Recent increases in terrestrial dissolved organic carbon (DOC) concentrations in northern inland waters have many ecological consequences. We examined available data on carbon cycles and food webs of 2 boreal headwater ... -
Effects of alternative electron acceptors on the activity and community structure of methane-producing and -consuming microbes in the sediments of two shallow boreal lakes
Rissanen, Antti; Karvinen, Anu; Nykänen, Hannu; Peura, Sari; Tiirola, Marja; Mäki, Anita; Kankaala, Paula (Federation of European Microbiological Societies; Oxford University Press, 2017)The role of anaerobic CH4 oxidation in controlling lake sediment CH4 emissions remains unclear. Therefore, we tested how relevant EAs (SO42−, NO3−, Fe3+, Mn4+, O2) affect CH4 production and oxidation in the sediments of ... -
Integrating Decomposers, Methane-Cycling Microbes and Ecosystem Carbon Fluxes Along a Peatland Successional Gradient in a Land Uplift Region
Juottonen, Heli; Kieman, Mirkka; Fritze, Hannu; Hamberg, Leena; Laine, Anna M.; Merilä, Päivi; Peltoniemi, Krista; Putkinen, Anuliina; Tuittila, Eeva-Stiina (Springer Science+Business Media, 2022)Peatlands are carbon dioxide (CO2) sinks that, in parallel, release methane (CH4). The peatland carbon (C) balance depends on the interplay of decomposer and CH4-cycling microbes, vegetation, and environmental conditions. ...