Affiliation:
1. Department of Physical Geography and Bolin Centre for Climate Research Stockholm University 10691 Stockholm Sweden
2. Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Department of Soil and Environment 75007 Uppsala Sweden
Abstract
Summary
A large fraction of plant litter comprises recalcitrant aromatic compounds (lignin and other phenolics). Quantifying the fate of aromatic compounds is difficult, because oxidative degradation of aromatic carbon (C) is a costly but necessary endeavor for microorganisms, and we do not know when gains from the decomposition of aromatic C outweigh energetic costs.
To evaluate these tradeoffs, we developed a litter decomposition model in which the aromatic C decomposition rate is optimized dynamically to maximize microbial growth for the given costs of maintaining ligninolytic activity. We tested model performance against > 200 litter decomposition datasets collected from published literature and assessed the effects of climate and litter chemistry on litter decomposition.
The model predicted a time‐varying ligninolytic oxidation rate, which was used to calculate the lag time before the decomposition of aromatic C is initiated. Warmer conditions increased decomposition rates, shortened the lag time of aromatic C oxidation, and improved microbial C‐use efficiency by decreasing the costs of oxidation. Moreover, a higher initial content of aromatic C promoted an earlier start of aromatic C decomposition under any climate.
With this contribution, we highlight the application of eco‐evolutionary approaches based on optimized microbial life strategies as an alternative parametrization scheme for litter decomposition models.
Funder
Vetenskapsrådet
HORIZON EUROPE European Research Council
Svenska Forskningsrådet Formas
Cited by
5 articles.
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