Publication | Open Access
Methanogenesis and Sulfate Reduction: Competitive and Noncompetitive Substrates in Estuarine Sediments
537
Citations
29
References
1982
Year
EngineeringMarine ChemistryMicrobial EcologyEnvironmental MicrobiologyBiogeochemistrySediment-water InteractionOrganic-rich Sedimentary RockSulfate ReductionSulfate-reducing BacteriaEstuarine SedimentsSedimentologyEstuarine GeochemistryEnvironmental EngineeringEarly DiagenesisSulfate IonsNoncompetitive SubstratesGeochemistryMicrobiologyMedicine
Sulfate ions did not inhibit methanogenesis in estuarine sediments supplemented with methanol, trimethylamine, or methionine. However, sulfate greatly retarded methanogenesis when hydrogen or acetate was the substrate. Sulfate reduction was stimulated by acetate, hydrogen, and acetate plus hydrogen, but not by methanol or trimethylamine. These results indicate that sulfate-reducing bacteria will outcompete methanogens for hydrogen, acetate, or both, but will not compete with methanogens for compounds like methanol, trimethylamine, or methionine, thereby allowing methanogenesis and sulfate reduction to operate simultaneously within anoxic, sulfate-containing sediments.
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