Synergistic effects of diffusion and microbial physiology reproduce the Birch effect in a micro-scale model
Authored by Christina Kaiser, Ulf Dieckmann, Oskar Franklin, Sarah Evans
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.soilbio.2015.10.020
Sponsors:
United States National Science Foundation (NSF)
Platforms:
No platforms listed
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Large rainfall events following drought cause pulses of CO2 flux that
are higher than models predict. This phenomenon, named the ``Birch
effect{''} after its discoverer, has been observed for decades, and will
influence carbon-climate feedbacks as drying-rewetting (DRW) cycles
become more common under intensified climates. Yet, the many interacting
factors that determine how soil DRW cycles affect C balance have been
difficult to separate empirically. Here we use a spatially explicit
biogeochemical-microbial model to examine the mechanisms underlying CO2
dynamics under DRW. We independently model physiological activity and
diffusion based on how they vary with (constant) moisture levels in
nature, and subject the model to DRW to test the importance of different
mechanisms in models with one or two microbial functional groups
(cheaters and producers). Our model reproduces respiration patterns
similar to empirical observations of the Birch effect when we include
mechanisms that link water content to microbial growth and to diffusion
rate, whereas inclusion of either mechanism alone produces significantly
lower pulses upon rewetting. Diffusion limitation under drought
increases substrate availability under rewetting, a process mediated by
biogeochemical hotspots and continued enzyme activity under drought. At
the same time, high microbial growth under rewetting is needed to
replenish enzyme pools and to sustain the biomass required to generate
respiration pulses under repeated DRW. Inclusion of cheaters in the
model dampens the size of the rewetting pulse and the cumulative amount
of CO2 release, as cheaters outcompete producers and reduce overall
biomass. Our results provide several novel hypotheses regarding the
microbial, biogeochemical, and spatial processes that mediate the Birch
effect, which will contribute to a better mechanistic understanding of
this important deviation from model predictions. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Tags
ecosystems
carbon
Decomposition
Cellular-automata
Respiration
Community dynamics
Organic-matter
Soil
Drying-rewetting frequency
N-mineralization