The rapid increase of the potent greenhouse gas methane in the atmosphere creates great urgency to develop and deploy technologies for methane mitigation. One approach to removing methane is to use bacteria for which methane is their carbon and energy source (methanotrophs). Such bacteria naturally convert methane to CO2and biomass, a value-added product and a cobenefit of methane removal. Typically, methanotrophs grow best at around 5,000 to 10,000 ppm methane, but methane in the atmosphere is 1.9 ppm. Air above emission sites such as landfills, anaerobic digestor effluents, rice paddy effluents, and oil and gas wells contains elevated methane in the 500 ppm range. If such sites are targeted for methane removal, technology harnessing aerobic methanotroph metabolism has the potential to become economically and environmentally viable. The first step in developing such methane removal technology is to identify methanotrophs with enhanced ability to grow and consume methane at 500 ppm and lower. We report here that some existing methanotrophic strains grow well at 500 ppm methane, and one of them,Methylotuvimicrobium buryatense5GB1C, consumes such low methane at enhanced rates compared to previously published values. Analyses of bioreactor-based performance and RNAseq-based transcriptomics suggest that this ability to utilize low methane is based at least in part on extremely low non-growth-associated maintenance energy and on high methane specific affinity. This bacterium is a candidate to develop technology for methane removal at emission sites. If appropriately scaled, such technology has the potential to slow global warming by 2050.
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Quantifying Methane Production at a Cattle Grazing Site using Open-Path Dual-Comb Spectroscopy
To better quantify methane emissions resulting from grazing cattle, a controlled methane release at an agricultural site is performed using dual comb spectroscopy. The achieved methane concentration precision is below 10 nmol/mol. The Author(s) Work of the US Government and not subject to copyright.
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- Award ID(s):
- 1726304
- PAR ID:
- 10469299
- Publisher / Repository:
- Optica Publishing Group
- Date Published:
- ISBN:
- 978-1-957171-25-8
- Page Range / eLocation ID:
- ATh1I.6
- Format(s):
- Medium: X
- Location:
- San Jose, CA
- Sponsoring Org:
- National Science Foundation
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