The global atmospheric level of methane (CH
4), the second
most important greenhouse gas, is currently increasing by ∼10 million
tons per year. Microbial oxidation in unsaturated soils is the only
known biological process that removes CH
4 from the atmosphere, but so far, bacteria that can grow on atmospheric CH
4
have eluded all cultivation efforts. This study isolated a
pure culture of a bacterium, strain MG08 that grows on air at
atmospheric concentrations of CH
4. This organism, named
Methylocapsa gorgona, is globally distributed in soils and closely related to uncultured members of the upland soil cluster α. CH
4 oxidation experiments and
13C-single cell isotope analyses demonstrated that it oxidizes atmospheric CH
4 aerobically and assimilates carbon from both CH
4 and CO
2.
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