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Title: Differences in soluble organic carbon chemistry in pore waters sampled from different pore size domains

Journal Article · · Soil Biology and Biochemistry

Spatial isolation of soil organic carbon (SOC) in different sized pores may be a mechanism by which otherwise labile carbon (C) could be protected in soils. When soil water content increases, the hydrologic connectivity of soil pores also increases, allowing greater transport of SOC and other resources from protected locations, to microbially colonized locations more favorable to decomposition. The heterogeneous distribution of specialized decomposers, C, and other resources throughout the soil indicates that the metabolism or persistence of soil C compounds is highly dependent on short-distance transport processes. The objective of this research was to characterize the complexity of C in pore waters held at weak and strong water tensions (effectively soil solution held behind coarse- and fine-pore throats, respectively) and evaluate the microbial decomposability of these pore waters. We saturated intact soil cores and extracted pore waters with increasing suction pressures to sequentially sample pore waters from increasingly fine pore domains. Ultrahigh resolution mass spectrometry of the SOC was used to profile the major biochemical classes (i.e., lipids, proteins, lignin, carbohydrates, and condensed aromatics) of compounds present in the pore waters; some of these samples were then used as substrates for growth of Cellvibrio japonicus (DSMZ 16018), Streptomyces cellulosae (ATCC® 25439™), and Trichoderma reseei (QM6a) in 7 day incubations. The soluble C in finer pores was more complex than the soluble C in coarser pores, and the incubations revealed that the more complex C in these fine pores is not recalcitrant. The decomposition of this complex C led to greater losses of C through respiration than the simpler C from coarser pore waters. Our research suggests that soils that experience repeated cycles of drying and wetting may result in patterns of CO2 fluxes that are driven by i) the transport of C from protected pools into active, ii) the chemical quality of the potentially soluble C, and iii) the type of microorganisms most likely to metabolize this C.

Research Organization:
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL), Richland, WA (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Biological and Environmental Research (BER)
Contributing Organization:
PNNL-Univ. of Maryland Joint Global Climate Change Research Inst., College Park, MD (United States)
Grant/Contract Number:
AC05-76RL01830
OSTI ID:
1390383
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1342226; OSTI ID: 1353307
Report Number(s):
PNNL-SA-118268; S0038071716306447; PII: S0038071716306447
Journal Information:
Soil Biology and Biochemistry, Journal Name: Soil Biology and Biochemistry Vol. 107 Journal Issue: C; ISSN 0038-0717
Publisher:
ElsevierCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United Kingdom
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 72 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

Cited By (11)

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Developing a molecular picture of soil organic matter–mineral interactions by quantifying organo–mineral binding journal August 2017
Shifts in pore connectivity from precipitation versus groundwater rewetting increases soil carbon loss after drought journal November 2017
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What do we know about soil carbon destabilization? journal July 2019
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Molecular characterization of organic matter mobilized from Bangladeshi aquifer sediment: tracking carbon compositional change during microbial utilization journal January 2018
Spatial gradients in the characteristics of soil-carbon fractions are associated with abiotic features but not microbial communities journal January 2019