Spatial gradients in the characteristics of soil-carbon fractions are associated with abiotic features but not microbial communities
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Published:2019-10-10
Issue:19
Volume:16
Page:3911-3928
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Sengupta AditiORCID, Indivero Julia, Gunn Cailene, Tfaily Malak M., Chu Rosalie K., Toyoda Jason, Bailey Vanessa L., Ward Nicholas D., Stegen James C.
Abstract
Abstract. Coastal terrestrial–aquatic interfaces (TAIs) are dynamic zones of
biogeochemical cycling influenced by salinity gradients. However, there is
significant heterogeneity in salinity influences on TAI soil biogeochemical
function. This heterogeneity is perhaps related to unrecognized mechanisms
associated with carbon (C) chemistry and microbial communities. To
investigate this potential, we evaluated hypotheses associated with
salinity-associated shifts in organic C thermodynamics; biochemical
transformations; and nitrogen-, phosphorus-, and sulfur-containing
heteroatom organic compounds in a first-order coastal watershed on the
Olympic Peninsula of Washington, USA. In contrast to our hypotheses,
thermodynamic favorability of water-soluble organic compounds in shallow
soils decreased with increasing salinity (43–867 µS cm−1), as
did the number of inferred biochemical transformations and total heteroatom
content. These patterns indicate lower microbial activity at higher salinity
that is potentially constrained by accumulation of less-favorable organic C.
Furthermore, organic compounds appeared to be primarily marine- or algae-derived
in forested floodplain soils with more lipid-like and protein-like
compounds, relative to upland soils that had more lignin-, tannin-, and
carbohydrate-like compounds. Based on a recent simulation-based study, we
further hypothesized a relationship between C chemistry and the ecological
assembly processes governing microbial community composition. Null modeling
revealed that differences in microbial community composition – assayed using
16S rRNA gene sequencing – were primarily the result of limited exchange of
organisms among communities (i.e., dispersal limitation). This results in
unstructured demographic events that cause community composition to diverge
stochastically, as opposed to divergence in community composition being due
to deterministic selection-based processes associated with differences in
environmental conditions. The strong influence of stochastic processes was
further reflected in there being no statistical relationship between
community assembly processes (e.g., the relative influence of stochastic
assembly processes) and C chemistry (e.g., heteroatom content). This
suggests that microbial community composition does not have a mechanistic or
causal linkage to C chemistry. The salinity-associated gradient in C
chemistry was, therefore, likely influenced by a combination of
spatially structured inputs and salinity-associated metabolic responses of
microbial communities that were independent of community composition. We
propose that impacts of salinity on coastal soil biogeochemistry need to be
understood in the context of C chemistry, hydrologic or depositional dynamics,
and microbial physiology, while microbial composition may have less
influence.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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