Biochar was recently identified as
an effective soil amendment
for CH4 capture. Corresponding mechanisms are currently
recognized to be from physical properties of biochar, providing a
favorable growth environment for aerobic methanotrophs which perform
aerobic methane (CH4) oxidation. However, our study shows
that the chemical reactivity of biochar can also stimulate anaerobic
oxidation of CH4 (AOM) by anaerobic methanotrophic archaea
(ANME) of ANME-2d, which proposes another plausible mechanism for
CH4 mitigation by biochar amendment in anaerobic environments.
It was found that, by adding biochar as the sole electron acceptor
in an anaerobic environment, CH4 was biologically oxidized,
with CO2 production of 106.3 ± 5.1 μmol g–1 biochar. In contrast, limited CO2 production
was observed with chemically reduced biochar amendment. This biological
nature of the process was confirmed by mcr gene transcript
abundance as well as sustained dominance of ANME-2d in the microbial
community during microbial incubations with active biochar amendment.
Combined FTIR and XPS analyses demonstrated that the redox activity
of biochar is related to its oxygen-based functional groups. On the
basis of microbial community evolution as well as intermediate production
during incubation, different pathways in terms of direct or indirect
interactions between ANME-2d and biochar were proposed for biochar-mediated
AOM.
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