Author

Date of Award

8-17-2024

Document Type

Thesis

Abstract

In this study, I investigated potential interactions between methane and mercury cycles in boreal forest soils. Additionally, I examined the changes in these cycles relative to shifts in soil moisture along an environmental soil moisture gradient. This investigation is pertinent due to the escalating rate of permafrost thaw driven by climate change in Arctic and subarctic ecosystems. Permafrost thaw leads to increased soil moisture, fostering favorable conditions for anaerobic microbial processes such as mercury methylation, methanogenesis, and anaerobic methanotrophy. Microbial mercury methylation creates monomethylmercury, a neurotoxin that accumulates in aquatic food webs. Methane cycling results in the production of greenhouse gases that can create a climate-warming feedback loop. In this study, I explored the mercury and methane cycles and analyzed the microbial communities involved in these cycles along an environmental soil moisture gradient. Microbial communities were analyzed by quantifying the relative abundance of taxonomic groups and by quantifying functional genes associated with mercury methylation, methanogenesis, and anaerobic methanotrophy. The relationship between soil water content and functional gene quantities was not significant. However, my findings did reveal a significant relationship between relative beta diversity and gravimetric water content along the environmental soil moisture gradient. The functional potential was predicted by quantifying net methane and net monomethylmercury production through incubations designed to measure total production in completely saturated, anoxic conditions I found that total mercury increases as soil moisture increases, methane efflux increases as soil moisture increases, and carbon dioxide efflux increases as soil moisture increases. This suggests that the activity of the mercury and methane cycles may change as permafrost continues to thaw and soil moisture content increases. In a changing climate, continuing to monitor these cycles in Alaska is pertinent due to its robust fishing industry, indigenous communities, subsistence fishing practices.

Handle

http://hdl.handle.net/11122/15539

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