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Functional and taxonomic dynamics of an electricity-consuming methane-producing microbial community

pmid: 26178785
Functional and taxonomic dynamics of an electricity-consuming methane-producing microbial community
The functional and taxonomic microbial dynamics of duplicate electricity-consuming methanogenic communities were observed over a 6 months period to characterize the reproducibility, stability and recovery of electromethanogenic consortia. The highest rate of methanogenesis was 0.72 mg-CH4/L/day, which occurred during the third month of enrichment when multiple methanogenic phylotypes and associated Desulfovibrionaceae phylotypes were present in the electrode-associated microbial community. Results also suggest that electromethanogenic microbial communities are very sensitive to electron donor-limiting open-circuit conditions. A 45 min exposure to open-circuit conditions induced an 87% drop in volumetric methane production rates. Methanogenic performance recovered after 4 months to a maximum value of 0.30 mg-CH4/L/day under set potential operation (-700 mV vs Ag/AgCl); however, current consumption and biomass production was variable over time. Long-term functional and taxonomic analyses from experimental replicates provide new knowledge toward understanding how to enrich electromethanogenic communities and operate bioelectrochemical systems for stable and reproducible performance.
- Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology Japan
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration United States
- Stanford University United States
- Ames Research Center United States
- J. Craig Venter Institute United States
Bioreactors, Bacteria, Electricity, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Biomass, Euryarchaeota, Methane, Phylogeny
Bioreactors, Bacteria, Electricity, RNA, Ribosomal, 16S, Biomass, Euryarchaeota, Methane, Phylogeny
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