July 29, 2025
Journal Article

Northern peatland microbial communities exhibit resistance to warming and acquire electron acceptors from soil organic matter

Abstract

The response of microbial communities that regulate belowground carbon turnover to climate change drivers in peatlands is poorly understood. Here, we leverage a whole ecosystem warming experiment to elucidate the key processes of terminal carbon decomposition and community responses to temperature rise. Our dataset of 697 metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) represents the microbial community from the surface (10 cm) to 2 m deep into the peat column, with only 3.7% of genomes overlapping with other well-studied peatlands. Community composition has yet to show a significant response to warming after 3 years, suggesting that metabolically diverse soil microbial communities are resistant to climate change. Surprisingly, abundant and active methanogens in the genus Candidatus Methanoflorens, Methanobacterium, and Methanoregula show the potential for both acetoclastic and hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis. Nonetheless, the predominant pathways for anaerobic carbon decomposition include sulfate/sulfite reduction, denitrification, and acetogenesis, rather than methanogenesis based on gene abundances. Multi-omics data suggest that organic matter cleavage provides terminal electron acceptors, which together with methanogen metabolic flexibility, may explain peat microbiome composition resistance to warming.

Published: July 29, 2025

Citation

Duchesneau K., B. Aldeguer-Riquelme, C. Petro, G. Makke, M. Green, M. Tfaily, and R. Wilson, et al. 2025. Northern peatland microbial communities exhibit resistance to warming and acquire electron acceptors from soil organic matter. Nature Communications 16:Art. No. 6869. PNNL-SA-213188. doi:10.1038/s41467-025-61664-7

Research topics