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Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis

The decomposition of plant litter in soil is a dynamic process during which substrate chemistry and microbial controls interact. We more clearly quantify these controls with a revised version of the Guild-based Decomposition Model (GDM) in which we used a reverse Michaelis-Menten approach to simulat...

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Autores principales: Moorhead, Daryl, Lashermes, Gwenaëlle, Recous, Sylvie, Bertrand, Isabelle
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4181322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25264895
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0108769
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author Moorhead, Daryl
Lashermes, Gwenaëlle
Recous, Sylvie
Bertrand, Isabelle
author_facet Moorhead, Daryl
Lashermes, Gwenaëlle
Recous, Sylvie
Bertrand, Isabelle
author_sort Moorhead, Daryl
collection PubMed
description The decomposition of plant litter in soil is a dynamic process during which substrate chemistry and microbial controls interact. We more clearly quantify these controls with a revised version of the Guild-based Decomposition Model (GDM) in which we used a reverse Michaelis-Menten approach to simulate short-term (112 days) decomposition of roots from four genotypes of Zea mays that differed primarily in lignin chemistry. A co-metabolic relationship between the degradation of lignin and holocellulose (cellulose+hemicellulose) fractions of litter showed that the reduction in decay rate with increasing lignin concentration (LCI) was related to the level of arabinan substitutions in arabinoxylan chains (i.e., arabinan to xylan or A∶X ratio) and the extent to which hemicellulose chains are cross-linked with lignin in plant cell walls. This pattern was consistent between genotypes and during progressive decomposition within each genotype. Moreover, decay rates were controlled by these cross-linkages from the start of decomposition. We also discovered it necessary to divide the Van Soest soluble (labile) fraction of litter C into two pools: one that rapidly decomposed and a second that was more persistent. Simulated microbial production was consistent with recent studies suggesting that more rapidly decomposing materials can generate greater amounts of potentially recalcitrant microbial products despite the rapid loss of litter mass. Sensitivity analyses failed to identify any model parameter that consistently explained a large proportion of model variation, suggesting that feedback controls between litter quality and microbial activity in the reverse Michaelis-Menten approach resulted in stable model behavior. Model extrapolations to an independent set of data, derived from the decomposition of 12 different genotypes of maize roots, averaged within <3% of observed respiration rates and total CO(2) efflux over 112 days.
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spelling pubmed-41813222014-10-07 Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis Moorhead, Daryl Lashermes, Gwenaëlle Recous, Sylvie Bertrand, Isabelle PLoS One Research Article The decomposition of plant litter in soil is a dynamic process during which substrate chemistry and microbial controls interact. We more clearly quantify these controls with a revised version of the Guild-based Decomposition Model (GDM) in which we used a reverse Michaelis-Menten approach to simulate short-term (112 days) decomposition of roots from four genotypes of Zea mays that differed primarily in lignin chemistry. A co-metabolic relationship between the degradation of lignin and holocellulose (cellulose+hemicellulose) fractions of litter showed that the reduction in decay rate with increasing lignin concentration (LCI) was related to the level of arabinan substitutions in arabinoxylan chains (i.e., arabinan to xylan or A∶X ratio) and the extent to which hemicellulose chains are cross-linked with lignin in plant cell walls. This pattern was consistent between genotypes and during progressive decomposition within each genotype. Moreover, decay rates were controlled by these cross-linkages from the start of decomposition. We also discovered it necessary to divide the Van Soest soluble (labile) fraction of litter C into two pools: one that rapidly decomposed and a second that was more persistent. Simulated microbial production was consistent with recent studies suggesting that more rapidly decomposing materials can generate greater amounts of potentially recalcitrant microbial products despite the rapid loss of litter mass. Sensitivity analyses failed to identify any model parameter that consistently explained a large proportion of model variation, suggesting that feedback controls between litter quality and microbial activity in the reverse Michaelis-Menten approach resulted in stable model behavior. Model extrapolations to an independent set of data, derived from the decomposition of 12 different genotypes of maize roots, averaged within <3% of observed respiration rates and total CO(2) efflux over 112 days. Public Library of Science 2014-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC4181322/ /pubmed/25264895 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0108769 Text en © 2014 Moorhead et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moorhead, Daryl
Lashermes, Gwenaëlle
Recous, Sylvie
Bertrand, Isabelle
Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis
title Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis
title_full Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis
title_fullStr Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis
title_full_unstemmed Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis
title_short Interacting Microbe and Litter Quality Controls on Litter Decomposition: A Modeling Analysis
title_sort interacting microbe and litter quality controls on litter decomposition: a modeling analysis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4181322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25264895
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0108769
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