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Chinese Journal of Applied Ecology ›› 2019, Vol. 30 ›› Issue (6): 1919-1926.doi: 10.13287/j.1001-9332.201906.035

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Moderate grazing increases the abundance of soil methane-oxidizing bacteria and CH4 uptake rate in a typical steppe of Inner Mongolia, China.

ZHANG Jun-zhen, ZHOU Di, GUO Xu-dong, GUO Ying, WANG Hao, CHENG Jian-wei, BAO Zhi-hua, BAOYIN Taogetao, LI Yong-hong*   

  1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Ecology and Resource Use of the Mongolian Plateau, Inner Mongolia Key Laboratory of Grassland Ecology, School of Ecology and Environment, Inner Mongolia University, Hohhot 010021, China
  • Received:2018-08-19 Online:2019-06-15 Published:2019-06-15
  • Supported by:
    The research was funded by National Science and Technology Support Plan (2015BAC02B04), the Grassland Ecosystem Research Fund of Department of Science and Technology of Inner Mongolia, and the Talent Project of Inner Mongolia University

Abstract: Microbial oxidation is the only biological sink of atmospheric methane (CH4). It is essential to understand the variation of CH4 fluxes among different grassland use types for developing low-emission management system. Here, we measured the CH4 flux and the soil methane-oxidizing bacteria abundance in a typical steppe under grazing, mowing and fencing management in central Inner Mongolia, with the aims to determine the effects of these grassland use types on CH4 flux, and to test the hypothesis that pmoA functional gene abundance regulates CH4 fluxes. The measurements were conducted on the experimental grassland that had experienced four grassland use treatments over five years. The treatments were whole growing season grazing from May to September (T1), spring and summer grazing (twice in May and July)(T2), autumn mowing (T3) and enclosure (T0). We measured CH4 flux using static chamber method, and quantified the abundance of pmoA functional genes using molecular techniques. Moreover, we measured plant biomass and soil physicochemical properties. The results showed that moderate grazing significantly enhanced CH4 uptake rate and the methane-oxidizing bacteria abundance (i.e., the pmoA gene copy number per gram of dry soil). The pmoA gene copy number ranged from 6.9×104 to 3.9×105 per gram of dry soil in growing season. The CH4 uptake rate was (68.21±3.01) μg·m-2·h-1 under T1, which was 22.1%, 37.5% and 30.9% higher than that under T2, T3 or T0 , respectively. The CH4 uptake rate was positively correlated with abundance of CH4 oxidizing bacteria and soil sand content, but negatively correlated with soil silt content, soil moisture, NH4+-N and NO3--N content, and plant biomass. These results suggested that the steppe ecosystem is a CH4 sink under all land-use types in central Inner Mongolia, and that moderate grazing would enhance methane-oxidizing bacteria abundance and CH4 uptake by improving soil sand content, reducing soil mineral nitrogen content and plant production in the typical steppe ecosystem. These results were of significance for the development of low-emission grassland management system.