Microbial community dynamics in soil aggregates shape biogeochemical gas fluxes from soil profiles - upscaling an aggregate biophysical model
Authored by Dani Or, Ali Ebrahimi
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.13345
Sponsors:
European Research Council (ERC)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Mathematical description
Model Code URLs:
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Abstract
Microbial communities inhabiting soil aggregates dynamically adjust
their activity and composition in response to variations in hydration
and other external conditions. These rapid dynamics shape signatures of
biogeochemical activity and gas fluxes emitted from soil profiles.
Recent mechanistic models of microbial processes in unsaturated
aggregate-like pore networks revealed a highly dynamic interplay between
oxic and anoxic microsites jointly shaped by hydration conditions and by
aerobic and anaerobic microbial community abundance and
self-organization. The spatial extent of anoxic niches (hotspots)
flicker in time (hot moments) and support substantial anaerobic
microbial activity even in aerated soil profiles. We employed an
individual-based model for microbial community life in soil aggregate
assemblies represented by 3D angular pore networks. Model aggregates of
different sizes were subjected to variable water, carbon and oxygen
contents that varied with soil depth as boundary conditions. The study
integrates microbial activity within aggregates of different sizes and
soil depth to obtain estimates of biogeochemical fluxes from the soil
profile. The results quantify impacts of dynamic shifts in microbial
community composition on CO2 and N2O production rates in soil profiles
in good agreement with experimental data. Aggregate size distribution
and the shape of resource profiles in a soil determine how hydration
dynamics shape denitrification and carbon utilization rates. Results
from the mechanistic model for microbial activity in aggregates of
different sizes were used to derive parameters for analytical
representation of soil biogeochemical processes across large scales of
practical interest for hydrological and climate models.
Tags
Rough surfaces
Dissolved organic-carbon
Native grassland soils
Water content
Size
distribution
Enzyme-activities
Ecosystem property
Oxygen diffusion
Tillage systems
Matter dynamics