Literature DB >> 31190013

Mineral protection regulates long-term global preservation of natural organic carbon.

Jordon D Hemingway1, Daniel H Rothman2, Katherine E Grant3, Sarah Z Rosengard4, Timothy I Eglinton5, Louis A Derry3, Valier V Galy6.   

Abstract

The balance between photosynthetic organic carbon production and respiration controls atmospheric composition and climate1,2. The majority of organic carbon is respired back to carbon dioxide in the biosphere, but a small fraction escapes remineralization and is preserved over geological timescales3. By removing reduced carbon from Earth's surface, this sequestration process promotes atmospheric oxygen accumulation2 and carbon dioxide removal1. Two major mechanisms have been proposed to explain organic carbon preservation: selective preservation of biochemically unreactive compounds4,5 and protection resulting from interactions with a mineral matrix6,7. Although both mechanisms can operate across a range of environments and timescales, their global relative importance on 1,000-year to 100,000-year timescales remains uncertain4. Here we present a global dataset of the distributions of organic carbon activation energy and corresponding radiocarbon ages in soils, sediments and dissolved organic carbon. We find that activation energy distributions broaden over time in all mineral-containing samples. This result requires increasing bond-strength diversity, consistent with the formation of organo-mineral bonds8 but inconsistent with selective preservation. Radiocarbon ages further reveal that high-energy, mineral-bound organic carbon persists for millennia relative to low-energy, unbound organic carbon. Our results provide globally coherent evidence for the proposed7 importance of mineral protection in promoting organic carbon preservation. We suggest that similar studies of bond-strength diversity in ancient sediments may reveal how and why organic carbon preservation-and thus atmospheric composition and climate-has varied over geological time.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 31190013     DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1280-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  21 in total

1.  Does Arctic warming reduce preservation of organic matter in Barents Sea sediments?

Authors:  Johan C Faust; Mark A Stevenson; Geoffrey D Abbott; Jochen Knies; Allyson Tessin; Isobel Mannion; Ailbe Ford; Robert Hilton; Jeffrey Peakall; Christian März
Journal:  Philos Trans A Math Phys Eng Sci       Date:  2020-08-31       Impact factor: 4.226

2.  Reactivity, fate and functional roles of dissolved organic matter in anoxic inland waters.

Authors:  Maximilian P Lau; Paul Del Giorgio
Journal:  Biol Lett       Date:  2020-02-26       Impact factor: 3.703

3.  Vegetal Undercurrents-Obscured Riverine Dynamics of Plant Debris.

Authors:  Melissa S Schwab; Robert G Hilton; Negar Haghipour; J Jotautas Baronas; Timothy I Eglinton
Journal:  J Geophys Res Biogeosci       Date:  2022-03-28       Impact factor: 4.432

4.  Global stocks and capacity of mineral-associated soil organic carbon.

Authors:  Katerina Georgiou; Robert B Jackson; Olga Vindušková; Rose Z Abramoff; Anders Ahlström; Wenting Feng; Jennifer W Harden; Adam F A Pellegrini; H Wayne Polley; Jennifer L Soong; William J Riley; Margaret S Torn
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-07-01       Impact factor: 17.694

5.  Coal fly ash is a major carbon flux in the Chang Jiang (Yangtze River) basin.

Authors:  Gen K Li; Woodward W Fischer; Michael P Lamb; A Joshua West; Ting Zhang; Valier Galy; Xingchen Tony Wang; Shilei Li; Hongrui Qiu; Gaojun Li; Liang Zhao; Jun Chen; Junfeng Ji
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-05-25       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Mineralogical control on methylotrophic methanogenesis and implications for cryptic methane cycling in marine surface sediment.

Authors:  Ke-Qing Xiao; Oliver W Moore; Peyman Babakhani; Lisa Curti; Caroline L Peacock
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2022-05-17       Impact factor: 14.919

7.  Quantification of Organic Carbon Sequestered by Biogenic Iron Sulfide Minerals in Long-Term Anoxic Laboratory Incubations.

Authors:  Nader Nabeh; Cheyenne Brokaw; Aude Picard
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 5.640

8.  Mechanistic strategies of microbial communities regulating lignocellulose deconstruction in a UK salt marsh.

Authors:  Daniel R Leadbeater; Nicola C Oates; Joseph P Bennett; Yi Li; Adam A Dowle; Joe D Taylor; Juliana Sanchez Alponti; Alexander T Setchfield; Anna M Alessi; Thorunn Helgason; Simon J McQueen-Mason; Neil C Bruce
Journal:  Microbiome       Date:  2021-02-17       Impact factor: 14.650

9.  Millennial scale persistence of organic carbon bound to iron in Arctic marine sediments.

Authors:  Johan C Faust; Allyson Tessin; Ben J Fisher; Mark Zindorf; Sonia Papadaki; Katharine R Hendry; Katherine A Doyle; Christian März
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-01-12       Impact factor: 14.919

10.  Climate control on terrestrial biospheric carbon turnover.

Authors:  Timothy I Eglinton; Valier V Galy; Jordon D Hemingway; Xiaojuan Feng; Hongyan Bao; Thomas M Blattmann; Angela F Dickens; Hannah Gies; Liviu Giosan; Negar Haghipour; Pengfei Hou; Maarten Lupker; Cameron P McIntyre; Daniel B Montluçon; Bernhard Peucker-Ehrenbrink; Camilo Ponton; Enno Schefuß; Melissa S Schwab; Britta M Voss; Lukas Wacker; Ying Wu; Meixun Zhao
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2021-02-23       Impact factor: 11.205

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