Journal article

Biological soil crusts as key player in biogeochemical P cycling during pedogenesis of sandy substrate


Authors listBaumann, Karen; Siebers, Meike; Kruse, Jens; Eckhardt, Kai-Uwe; Hu, Yongfeng; Michalik, Dirk; Siebers, Nina; Kar, Gourango; Karsten, Ulf; Leinweber, Peter

Publication year2019

Pages145-158

JournalGeoderma

Volume number338

ISSN0016-7061

eISSN1872-6259

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2018.11.034

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Little is known about phosphorus (P) in biological soil crusts (BSCs) and their role in biogeochemical P cycling. The present study evaluated P in BSCs with an array of methodological approaches including sequential P fractionation, solution P-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy, synchrotron-based P K-edge X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES) spectroscopy, elemental mapping (mu-XRF) combined with mu-XANES and P-lipid quantification. BSCs (light algal crusts) were collected at seven sites along a sediment weathering gradient in north-eastern Germany (based on feldspar weathering indices) from non-weathered dune sands at the Baltic Sea coast to more strongly weathered Weichselian glacio-fluvial sands near Berlin. The total P (P-t) concentrations of BSCs ranged from 93 to 389 mg kg(-1) and were not significantly correlated with the change in feldspar weathering index. While concentrations of stable P (H2SO4-extractable) strongly decreased, labile P (resin- + NaHCO3-extractable P) in BSCs increased with increasing sediment weathering. Based on P-31 NMR spectra, 20 to 62% of NaOH-EDTA extracted P was orthophosphate monoesters and 0 to 9% was diesters. For BSCs, P K-edge XANES showed that Ca-P species decreased with increasing weathering. Heterogeneity of the BSCs was exemplarily shown at the micrometre scale by element mapping mu-XRF and mu-XANES, using four 10 x 10 mu m spots of a vertical cross-section within a coastal dune BSC. While only the P-lipid class phosphatidic acid (PA) increased with increasing weathering, analyses of BSC phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) revealed decreasing contributions of Gram-positive bacteria with increasing coastal sediment weathering but different taxa were independent of any investigated P parameter. Proportions of lipid-P varied between 0.02 and 0.1% of Pt, indicating a constant share of living biomass in BSCs along the gradient. In conclusion, this multi-method study of P speciation in BSCs showed that these communities play a key role in the biogeochemical P cycle, especially by transforming stable P into labile, easily bioavailable P.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleBaumann, K., Siebers, M., Kruse, J., Eckhardt, K., Hu, Y., Michalik, D., et al. (2019) Biological soil crusts as key player in biogeochemical P cycling during pedogenesis of sandy substrate, Geoderma, 338, pp. 145-158. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2018.11.034

APA Citation styleBaumann, K., Siebers, M., Kruse, J., Eckhardt, K., Hu, Y., Michalik, D., Siebers, N., Kar, G., Karsten, U., & Leinweber, P. (2019). Biological soil crusts as key player in biogeochemical P cycling during pedogenesis of sandy substrate. Geoderma. 338, 145-158. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2018.11.034



Keywords


BSCCOLORADO PLATEAUK-EDGE XANESNUCLEAR-MAGNETIC-RESONANCEORGANIC PHOSPHORUS TRANSFORMATIONSPHOSPHATE-TRANSPORTPhospholipidSEQUENTIAL FRACTIONATION


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-02-04 at 01:09