AUTHOR=Boye Kristin , Herrmann Anke M. , Schaefer Michael V. , Tfaily Malak M. , Fendorf Scott TITLE=Discerning Microbially Mediated Processes During Redox Transitions in Flooded Soils Using Carbon and Energy Balances JOURNAL=Frontiers in Environmental Science VOLUME=6 YEAR=2018 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/environmental-science/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2018.00015 DOI=10.3389/fenvs.2018.00015 ISSN=2296-665X ABSTRACT=
Recurring dry-wet cycles of soils, such as in rice paddies and on floodplains, have a dramatic impact on biogeochemical processes. The rates and trajectories of microbial metabolic functions during transition periods from drained to flooded conditions affect the transformation rates and phase partitioning of carbon, nutrients, and contaminants. However, the regulating mechanisms responsible for diverging functional metabolisms during such transitions are poorly resolved. The chemistry of organic carbon within the microbially available pool likely holds key information regarding carbon cycling and redox transformation rates. In this study, we used mesocosms to examine the influence of different carbon sources (glucose, straw, manure, char) on microbial energetics, respiration rates, and carbon balances in rice paddy soils during the transition from drained to flooded conditions following inundation. We found that variability in carbon solubility (1.6–400 mg g−1) and chemical composition of the amendments led to non-uniform stimulation of carbon dioxide production per unit carbon added (0.4–32.9 mmol CO2 mol−1 added C). However, there was a clear linear correlation between energy release and net CO2 production rate (