Energy resolves Organic Carbon Complexity in anoxic waters
Basic data for this project
Type of project: Individual project
Duration at the University of Münster: 01/06/2023 - 31/05/2026 | 1st Funding period
Description
Inland waters are an important component of the global carbon cycle
because they transport and process large amounts of organic matter (OM)
which they receive from the terrestrial biosphere. Dissolved OM affects
the color and health of these waters, and supplies the aquatic food web
with external energy. The fate of OM largely depends on its reactivity
in these waters: Because oxidation and mineralization to CO2 is the
ultimate OM sink process, the conventional paradigm considers oxygen
availability as a critical control on OM reactivity and turnover.
However, there is very active production, processing and transformation
of OM also in anoxic (oxygen-deprived) waters. A range of pathways on
which the chemical structure and composition of OM is transformed are
exclusive to anoxia, including (1.) the preferential degradation of
energy-rich OM fractions, (2.) disrupted recycling of microbial OM, and
(3.) reaction with hydrogen (H2) from anaerobes. Currently, it is
unclear under which conditions these pathways occur, if multiple
pathways interact and how they affect the ultimate fate of carbon in
inland waters. This lack of understanding persists, despite anoxic
conditions are widespread in the freshwater corridor, and global warming
and eutrophication have been predicted to further increase anoxia
duration and range. The central aim of this project is thus to classify
the ecological and biogeochemical drivers that transform DOM in anoxic
environments. To this end, we develop a novel framework based on
mechanistically meaningful, compound-level free energy (ΔG)
characteristics of OM using large compound databases. We use this
energy-based framework first to conceptualize distinct anoxic
transformation pathways in isolation, and later to trace multiple
pathways in complex environmental samples. This builds the foundation to
find the locale- and substrate-specific factors (e.g., availability of
energy, timescales of anoxia) that vary with OM compositional changes
observed in anoxia. Finally, large environmental datasets will be
analyzed to assess the landscape-level imprint that anoxia leaves in OM
during its passage of the soil-to-ocean continuum. The outcome of this
project will pave the way for a novel energy-centric perspective of OM
cycling in aquatic systems, allowing for a more accurate analysis of its
biotic and abiotic processing and to link OM transformation pathways
across ecosystems and research communities.
Keywords: Inland waters
Funding identifier: KN 929/29-1 | DFG project number: 505956695
Funder / funding scheme: - DFG - Individual Grants Programme
Project management at the University of Münster
Applicants from the University of Münster
Project partners outside the University of Münster
- TU Bergakademie Freiberg (TUBAF)Germany
- Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research (UFZ)Germany
- University of Montreal (UdeM)Canada