Coupled biological and abiotic mechanisms driving carbonyl sulfide production in soils
MEREDITH, Laura K.
School of Natural Resources and the Environment
Department of Earth System Science
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School of Natural Resources and the Environment
Department of Earth System Science
MEREDITH, Laura K.
School of Natural Resources and the Environment
Department of Earth System Science
< Réduire
School of Natural Resources and the Environment
Department of Earth System Science
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Soil Systems. 2018, vol. 2, n° 3, p. 1-27
MDPI
Résumé en anglais
Understanding soil production of the trace gas carbonyl sulfide (OCS) is key to its use as a tracer of ecosystem function. Underlying its application is the observation that vascular plants consume atmospheric OCS via their ...Lire la suite >
Understanding soil production of the trace gas carbonyl sulfide (OCS) is key to its use as a tracer of ecosystem function. Underlying its application is the observation that vascular plants consume atmospheric OCS via their stomatal pores in proportion with CO2 photosynthesis and that soil fluxes of OCS are negligible in comparison. Recent soil-centered studies demonstrate that soils can produce OCS and contribute as much as a quarter of the atmospheric terrestrial flux. Despite the potential widespread importance of soil OCS emissions, insufficient data exist to predict variations in OCS production across ecosystems, and the chemical and biological drivers of OCS production are virtually unknown. In this study, we address this knowledge gap by investigating variables controlling OCS soil production including soil physical and chemical properties, microbial community composition, and sulfur speciation in two independent surveys. We found that soil OCS production was nearly ubiquitous across the 58 sites, increased exponentially with temperature, and was insensitive to visible light conditioning. Soil pH, N, and C/N were predictors of OCS soil production rates in both soil surveys. Patterns in soil S speciation and predicted microbial S-cycling pathways both pointed to S-containing amino acids such as cysteine and methionine and their derivatives as potential precursors for OCS production. Elevated sulfate levels were associated with OCS production in some soils. This study provides new mechanistic insight into OCS production in soils and presents strategies to represent soil OCS fluxes that facilitate the use of OCS as a tracer for leaf-level processes related to carbon and water cycling.< Réduire
Mots clés
OCS
COS
soil
Mots clés en anglais
carbonyl sulfide
sulfur cycle
carbon cycle
Projet Européen
Carbonic anhydrase: where the CO2, COS and H2O cycles meet
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche