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Mineralization of ancient carbon in the subsurface of riparian forests
Authors
Addy
Arthur J. Gold
+52 more
Bilbrough
Boyer
Buckau
Chasar
D. Q. Kellogg
Daniel M. McCorkle
Dioumaeva
Dunnivant
Eissenstat
Fierer
Fustec
Gold
Gold
Groffman
Gurwick
Haycock
Hill
Hill
Hill
Hill
Hogberg
Howarth
Hua
Istok
Jacinthe
Kellogg
Lowrance
Mayorga
McCallister
McCarty
McMahon
Minderman
Moore
National Ocean Sciences Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Facility (NOSAMS)
Nelson
Noel P. Gurwick
Parkin
Peter M. Groffman
Peter Seitz-Rundlett
Petsch
Petsch
Rector
Reimer
Reimer
Rosenblatt
Simmons
Six
Sollins
Starr
Stuiver
Well
Zimov
Publication date
1 January 2008
Publisher
'American Geophysical Union (AGU)'
Doi
Abstract
Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2008. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Journal of Geophysical Research 113 (2008): G02021, doi:10.1029/2007JG000482.Microbial activity in saturated, subsurface sediments in riparian forests may be supported by recent photosynthate or ancient (>500 ybp) soil organic carbon (SOC) in buried horizons. Metabolism of ancient SOC may be particularly important in riparian zones, considered denitrification hot spots, because denitrification in the riparian subsurface is often C-limited, because buried horizons intersect deep flow paths, and because low C mineralization rates can support ecosystem-relevant rates of denitrification. Buried horizons are common where alluvial processes (stream migration, overbank flow) have dominated riparian evolution. Our objectives were to determine: (1) the extent to which ancient SOC directly supports subsurface microbial activity; (2) whether different C sources support microbial activity in alluvial versus glaciofluvial riparian zones; and (3) how microbial use of ancient SOC varies with depth. In situ groundwater incubations and 14C dating of dissolved inorganic carbon revealed that ancient SOC mineralization was common, and that it constituted 31–100% of C mineralization 2.6 m deep at one site, at rates sufficient to influence landscape N budgets. Our data failed to reveal consistent spatial patterns of microbially available ancient C. Although mineralized C age increased with depth at one alluvial site, we observed ancient C metabolism 150 cm deep at a glaciofluvial site, suggesting that subsurface microbial activity in riparian zones does not vary systematically between alluvial and glaciofluvial hydrogeologic settings. These findings underscore the relevance of ancient C to contemporary ecosystem processes and the challenge of using mappable surface features to identify subsurface ecosystem characteristics or riparian zone N-sink strength.We are grateful to the Cornell Program in Biogeochemistry for graduate research grants and to the U.S. EPA for a STAR Graduate Fellowship to Noel Gurwick. Support for radiocarbon analyses also came from USDANRICGP grant 99–35102– 8266, NSF cooperative agreement OCE-9807266, and an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation grant to the Institute of Ecosystem Studies. A graduate research grant to N. Gurwick from the Theresa Heinz Scholars for Environmental Research provided salary for Pete Seitz-Rundlett
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