The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases

Gases with a mixing ratio of less than one percent in the lower atmosphere (i.e. the troposphere) are considered as trace gases. Numerous of these trace gases originate from biological processes in marine and terrestrial ecosystems. These gases are of relevance for the climate as they contribute to...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
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Year of Publication:2017
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (201 p.)
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spelling Claudia Knief auth
The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
Frontiers Media SA 2017
1 electronic resource (201 p.)
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Frontiers Research Topics
Gases with a mixing ratio of less than one percent in the lower atmosphere (i.e. the troposphere) are considered as trace gases. Numerous of these trace gases originate from biological processes in marine and terrestrial ecosystems. These gases are of relevance for the climate as they contribute to global warming or to the troposphere’s chemical reactive system that builds the ozone layer or they impact on the stability of aerosols, greenhouse, and pollutant gases. These reactive trace gases include methane, a multitude of volatile organic compounds of biogenic origin (bVOCs) and inorganic gases such as nitrogen oxides or ozone. The regulatory function of microorganisms for trace gas cycling has been intensively studied for the greenhouse gases nitrous oxide and methane, but is less well understood for microorganisms that metabolize molecular hydrogen, carbon monoxide, or bVOCs. The studies compiled in this Research Topic reflect this very well. While a number of articles focus on nitrous oxide and methane or carbon monoxide oxidation, only a few articles address conversion processes of further bVOCs. The Research Topic is complemented by three review articles about the consumption of methane and monoterpenes, as well as the role of the phyllosphere as a particular habitat for trace gas-consuming microorganisms, and point out future research directions in the field. The presented scientific work illustrates that the field of microbial regulation of trace glas fluxes is still in its infancy when one broadens the view on gases beyond methane and nitrous oxide. However, there is a societal need to better predict global dynamics of trace gases that impact on the functionality and warming of the troposphere. Upcoming modelling approaches will need further information on process rates, features and distribution of the driving microorganisms to fulfill this demanding task.
English
methanotroph
nitrous oxide
volatile organic compounds
bVOCs
methane
carbon monoxide
phyllosphere
trace gases
denitrification
2-88945-326-X
J. Colin Murrell auth
Marcus A. Horn auth
Steffen Kolb auth
language English
format eBook
author Claudia Knief
spellingShingle Claudia Knief
The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Claudia Knief
J. Colin Murrell
Marcus A. Horn
Steffen Kolb
author_variant c k ck
author2 J. Colin Murrell
Marcus A. Horn
Steffen Kolb
author2_variant j c m jcm
m a h mah
s k sk
author_sort Claudia Knief
title The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
title_full The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
title_fullStr The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
title_full_unstemmed The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
title_auth The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
title_new The Impact of Microorganisms on Consumption of Atmospheric Trace Gases
title_sort the impact of microorganisms on consumption of atmospheric trace gases
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2017
physical 1 electronic resource (201 p.)
isbn 2-88945-326-X
illustrated Not Illustrated
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