4.8 Article

High carbon losses from oxygen-limited soils challenge biogeochemical theory and model assumptions

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 23, Pages 6166-6180

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15867

Keywords

carbon decomposition; carbon stable isotope; iron redox; methane; microbial model; mineral-associated carbon; ModEx; oxygen fluctuation

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation, Division of Environmental Biology [1457805]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41901059]
  3. National Science Foundation [1331841]
  4. Direct For Biological Sciences [1457805] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  5. Directorate For Geosciences
  6. Division Of Earth Sciences [1331841] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  7. Division Of Environmental Biology [1457805] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The research shows that periodic anoxia may sustain or even stimulate decomposition in saturated soils, despite the fact that cumulative carbon losses do not consistently decrease with decreasing oxygen exposure. Improved models accounting for microbial responses to oxygen fluctuations are crucial for effectively modeling carbon-climate feedbacks in humid ecosystems.
Oxygen (O-2) limitation contributes to persistence of large carbon (C) stocks in saturated soils. However, many soils experience spatiotemporal O-2 fluctuations impacted by climate and land-use change, and O-2-mediated climate feedbacks from soil greenhouse gas emissions remain poorly constrained. Current theory and models posit that anoxia uniformly suppresses carbon (C) decomposition. Here we show that periodic anoxia may sustain or even stimulate decomposition over weeks to months in two disparate soils by increasing turnover and/or size of fast-cycling C pools relative to static oxic conditions, and by sustaining decomposition of reduced organic molecules. Cumulative C losses did not decrease consistently as cumulative O-2 exposure decreased. After >1 year, soils anoxic for 75% of the time had similar C losses as the oxic control but nearly threefold greater climate impact on a CO2-equivalent basis (20-year timescale) due to high methane (CH4) emission. A mechanistic model incorporating current theory closely reproduced oxic control results but systematically underestimated C losses under O-2 fluctuations. Using a model-experiment integration (ModEx) approach, we found that models were improved by varying microbial maintenance respiration and the fraction of CH4 production in total C mineralization as a function of O-2 availability. Consistent with thermodynamic expectations, the calibrated models predicted lower microbial C-use efficiency with increasing anoxic duration in one soil; in the other soil, dynamic organo-mineral interactions implied by our empirical data but not represented in the model may have obscured this relationship. In both soils, the updated model was better able to capture transient spikes in C mineralization that occurred following anoxic-oxic transitions, where decomposition from the fluctuating-O-2 treatments greatly exceeded the control. Overall, our data-model comparison indicates that incorporating emergent biogeochemical properties of soil O-2 variability will be critical for effectively modeling C-climate feedbacks in humid ecosystems.

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