Microbial dynamics in a High Arctic glacier forefield: a combined field, laboratory, and modelling approach
Modelling the development of soils in glacier forefields is necessary in order to assess how microbial and geochemical processes interact and shape soil development in response to glacier retreat. Furthermore, such models can help us predict microbial growth and the fate of Arctic soils in an increa...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Copernicus Publications
2016-10-01
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Series: | Biogeosciences |
Online Access: | http://www.biogeosciences.net/13/5677/2016/bg-13-5677-2016.pdf |
Summary: | Modelling the development of soils in glacier forefields is
necessary in order to assess how microbial and geochemical processes
interact and shape soil development in response to glacier retreat.
Furthermore, such models can help us predict microbial growth and the fate
of Arctic soils in an increasingly ice-free future. Here, for the first
time, we combined field sampling with laboratory analyses and numerical
modelling to investigate microbial community dynamics in oligotrophic
proglacial soils in Svalbard. We measured low bacterial growth rates and
growth efficiencies (relative to estimates from Alpine glacier forefields)
and high sensitivity of bacterial growth rates to soil temperature (relative to temperate soils). We
used these laboratory measurements to inform parameter values in a new
numerical model and significantly refined predictions of microbial and
biogeochemical dynamics of soil development over a period of roughly 120 years. The model predicted the observed accumulation of autotrophic and
heterotrophic biomass. Genomic data indicated that initial microbial
communities were dominated by bacteria derived from the glacial environment,
whereas older soils hosted a mixed community of autotrophic and
heterotrophic bacteria. This finding was simulated by the numerical model,
which showed that active microbial communities play key roles in fixing and
recycling carbon and nutrients. We also demonstrated the role of
allochthonous carbon and microbial necromass in sustaining a pool of organic
material, despite high heterotrophic activity in older soils. This combined
field, laboratory, and modelling approach demonstrates the value of
integrated model–data studies to understand and quantify the functioning of
the microbial community in an emerging High Arctic soil ecosystem. |
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ISSN: | 1726-4170 1726-4189 |