Termite mounds mitigate half of termite methane emissions

Termites are responsible for ∼1 to 3%of global methane (CH₄) emissions. However, estimates of global termite CH₄ emissions span two orders of magnitude, suggesting that fundamental knowledge of CH₄ turnover processes in termite colonies is missing. In particular, there is little reliable information...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2018-12, Vol.115 (52), p.13306-13311
Hauptverfasser: Nauer, Philipp A., Hutley, Lindsay B., Arndt, Stefan K.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Termites are responsible for ∼1 to 3%of global methane (CH₄) emissions. However, estimates of global termite CH₄ emissions span two orders of magnitude, suggesting that fundamental knowledge of CH₄ turnover processes in termite colonies is missing. In particular, there is little reliable information on the extent and location of microbial CH₄ oxidation in termite mounds. Here, we use a one-box model to unify three independent field methods—a gas-tracer test, an inhibitor approach, and a stable-isotope technique—and quantify CH₄ production, oxidation, and transport in three North Australian termite species with different feeding habits and mound architectures. We present systematic in situ evidence of widespread CH₄ oxidation in termite mounds, with 20 to 80% of termite-produced CH₄ being mitigated before emission to the atmosphere. Furthermore, closing the CH₄ mass balance in mounds allows us to estimate in situ termite biomass from CH₄ turnover, with mean biomass ranging between 22 and 86 g of termites per kilogram of mound for the three species. Field tests with excavated mounds show that the predominant location of CH₄ oxidation is either in the mound material or the soil beneath and is related to species-specific mound porosities. Regardless of termite species, however, our data and model suggest that the fraction of oxidized CH₄ (f ox) remains well buffered due to links among consumption, oxidation, and transport processes via mound CH₄ concentration. The mean f ox of 0.50 ± 0.11 (95% CI) from in situ measurements therefore presents a valid oxidation factor for future global estimates of termite CH₄ emissions.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1809790115