Spatially Explicit Linkages Between Redox Potential Cycles and Soil Moisture Fluctuations

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Version: Final published version
License: CC BY 4.0
Serval ID
serval:BIB_79357A363732
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
Spatially Explicit Linkages Between Redox Potential Cycles and Soil Moisture Fluctuations
Journal
Water Resources Research
Author(s)
Miele Filippo, Benettin Paolo, Wang Simiao, Retti Ivan, Asadollahi Mitra, Frutschi Manon, Mohanty Binayak, Bernier-Latmani Rizlan, Rinaldo Andrea
ISSN
0043-1397
1944-7973
Publication state
Published
Issued date
03/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Volume
59
Number
3
Language
english
Abstract
Reduction-oxidation cycles measured through soil redox potential (Eh) are associated with dynamic soil microbial activity. Understanding changes in the composition of, and resource use by, soil microbial communities requires Eh predictability under shifting hydrologic drivers. Here, 50-cm soil column installations are manipulated to vary hydrologic and geochemical conditions, and are extensively monitored by a dense instrumental deployment to record the depth-time variation of physical and biogeochemical conditions. We contrast measurements of Eh, soil saturation and key compounds in water samples (probing the majority of soil microbial metabolisms) with computations of the relevant state variables, to investigate the interplay between soil moisture and redox potential dynamics. Our results highlight the importance of joint spatially resolved hydrologic flow/transport and redox processes, the worth of contrasting experiments and computations for a sufficient understanding of the Eh dynamics, and the minimum amount of biogeochemistry needed to characterize the dynamics of electron donors/acceptors that are responsible for the patterns of Eh not directly explained by physical oxic/anoxic transitions. As an example, measured concentrations of sulfate, ammonium and iron II suggest coexistence of both oxic and anoxic conditions. We find that the local saturation velocity (a threshold value of the time derivative of soil saturation) exerts a significant hysteretic control on oxygen intrusion and on the cycling of redox potentials, in contrast with approaches using a single threshold saturation level as the determinant of anoxic conditions. Our findings improve our ability to target how and where hotspots of activity develop within soil microbial communities.
Keywords
oxic/anoxis transitions, electron donors/acceptors, lysmeter experiments, soil microbial communities, hydrologic controls, soil saturation dynamics
Web of science
Open Access
Yes
Create date
21/11/2023 17:09
Last modification date
11/07/2024 13:09
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