April 23, 2025
Journal Article

Seasonal controls on microbial depolymerization and oxidation of organic matter in floodplain soils

Abstract

Floodplain soils are vast reservoirs of organic carbon often attributed to anaerobic conditions that impose metabolic constraints on organic matter degradation. What remains elusive is how such metabolic constraints respond to dynamic flooding and drainage cycles characteristic of floodplain soils. Here we show that microbial depolymerization and respiration of organic compounds, two rate-limiting steps in decomposition, vary spatially and temporally with seasonal flooding of mountainous floodplain soils (Gothic, Colorado, USA). Combining metabolomics and -proteomics, we found a lower abundance of oxidative enzymes during flooding coincided with the accumulation of aromatic, high-molecular weight compounds, particularly in surface soils. In subsurface soils, we found that a lower oxidation state of carbon coincided with a greater abundance of chemically reduced, energetically less favorable lowmolecular weight metabolites, irrespective of flooding condition. Our results suggest that seasonal flooding temporarily constrains oxidative depolymerization of larger, potentially plantderived compounds in surface soils; in contrast, energetic constraints on microbial respiration persist in more reducing subsurface soils regardless of flooding. Our work underscores that the potential vulnerability of these distinct anaerobic carbon storage mechanisms to changing flooding dynamics should be considered, particularly as climate change is shifting both frequency and extent of flooding in floodplains globally.

Published: April 23, 2025

Citation

Anderson C.G., M.M. Tfaily, R.K. Chu, N. Tolic, P.M. Fox, P.S. Nico, and S. Fendorf, et al. 2024. Seasonal controls on microbial depolymerization and oxidation of organic matter in floodplain soils. Environmental Science & Technology 58, no. 38:16815 - 16823. PNNL-SA-201526. doi:10.1021/acs.est.4c05109

Research topics