California is experiencing changes in precipitation and wildfire regimes. Longer, hotter fire seasons along with extremes in precipitation are expected to continue. Not only do these disturbances affect the productivity and resilience of ecosystems, they also directly impact human health and wellbeing. Soils hold an immense amount of our terrestrial carbon pool, and the microorganisms and minerals in soil affect whether carbon remains in the soil or is released as carbon dioxide. But it is not clear how changing soil moisture and fire regimes will affect how quickly carbon is released as carbon dioxide by microorganisms or how strongly it associates with soil minerals. Our goal is to understand whether the minerals and microbes in soils become less efficient at retaining carbon if they become drier or burned. To this end, we develop and apply methods to quantify how well soil carbon sticks to different soil minerals, and how quickly carbon is decomposed by microorganisms in the context of fire and precipitation disturbances.
Statement of Problem: Soils play a critical role in many ecosystem services that rely on the cycling of carbon and nutrients. Whether or not soils can continue to provide these services is contingent on how much the cycling of carbon and nutrients is altered by expected increases in fire and precipitation variability. However, the dynamic interplay between microbial activity, soil mineralogy, and soil moisture that controls carbon cycling is unconstrained, particularly as we transition to new patterns in fire and precipitation.
Why this Research is Important: Our research improves the basic understanding of how soils and microorganisms will function in California’s future. This information is essential if we want to predict how ecosystems respond to future disturbances. Northern California is incredibly diverse in its geology and climate, which increases complexity but provides an incredible opportunity to disentangle the interacting controls of mineralogy and moisture on microbially driven soil carbon loss and retention. Moreover, understanding of the relative importance of soil mineralogy to organic matter turnover after disturbance will allow for strategic sampling and scaling of site-specific patterns to regional scales.
Objective(s): The objectives of this study are to: (i) parameterize soil carbon cycling with changing soil moisture based on the type of minerals present (e.g. amorphous vs primary) and the way organic matter sticks to the minerals (e.g. adsorption vs in a microbial biofilm); (ii) assess carbon storage and turnover along natural gradients of precipitation, soil moisture, and mineralogy, and (iii) quantify changes in carbon storage and turnover in ecosystems impacted by changing wildfire and soil moisture across diverse lithologies. By achieving these objectives, we will have a more complete understanding of the capacity of soils and microbes to hold onto carbon after disturbance in the complex geological landscape of Northern California.
Methods: We employ a variety of field, laboratory, and data synthesis approaches to quantify the impacts of fire and precipitation on soil biogeochemical processes in the Western U.S. This project uses stable light isotopes (13C, 15N) at natural abundance and enriched levels as a tool to track the formation, recycling, and destabilization of carbon in soils. We quantify carbon as it is transformed by soil microorganisms in the lab and in the field by combining bulk (e.g., dissolved organic matter, total carbon, greenhouse gas production), fraction-based (e.g., sequential dissolutions, size and density fractionation), and spatially resolved (scanning electron microscopy, mid-infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy) techniques. Our field sites span gradients in soil age (soil chronosequences), precipitation, and disturbance (wildfire) across diverse lithologies in Northern California to link lab process-based measurements to the landscape scale.
Arctic Biogeochemical Response to Permafrost Thaw (ABRUPT)
Forest health and drought response
Deconstructing the microbial necromass continuum to inform soil carbon sequestration
A combined microbial and ecosystem metric of carbon retention efficiency explains land cover-dependent soil microbial biodiversity–ecosystem function relationships
From pools to flow: The PROMISE framework for new insights on soil carbon cycling in a changing world
Mineralogy dictates the initial mechanism of microbial necromass association
- Overview
California is experiencing changes in precipitation and wildfire regimes. Longer, hotter fire seasons along with extremes in precipitation are expected to continue. Not only do these disturbances affect the productivity and resilience of ecosystems, they also directly impact human health and wellbeing. Soils hold an immense amount of our terrestrial carbon pool, and the microorganisms and minerals in soil affect whether carbon remains in the soil or is released as carbon dioxide. But it is not clear how changing soil moisture and fire regimes will affect how quickly carbon is released as carbon dioxide by microorganisms or how strongly it associates with soil minerals. Our goal is to understand whether the minerals and microbes in soils become less efficient at retaining carbon if they become drier or burned. To this end, we develop and apply methods to quantify how well soil carbon sticks to different soil minerals, and how quickly carbon is decomposed by microorganisms in the context of fire and precipitation disturbances.
Statement of Problem: Soils play a critical role in many ecosystem services that rely on the cycling of carbon and nutrients. Whether or not soils can continue to provide these services is contingent on how much the cycling of carbon and nutrients is altered by expected increases in fire and precipitation variability. However, the dynamic interplay between microbial activity, soil mineralogy, and soil moisture that controls carbon cycling is unconstrained, particularly as we transition to new patterns in fire and precipitation.
An established monitoring site to assess soil recovery in a chaparral ecosystem that burned in the 2020 LNU Lightning Complex Fire. Injecting 13C enriched carbon into soil incubations to quantify organo-mineral association of dead microbes with soil minerals. Why this Research is Important: Our research improves the basic understanding of how soils and microorganisms will function in California’s future. This information is essential if we want to predict how ecosystems respond to future disturbances. Northern California is incredibly diverse in its geology and climate, which increases complexity but provides an incredible opportunity to disentangle the interacting controls of mineralogy and moisture on microbially driven soil carbon loss and retention. Moreover, understanding of the relative importance of soil mineralogy to organic matter turnover after disturbance will allow for strategic sampling and scaling of site-specific patterns to regional scales.
Objective(s): The objectives of this study are to: (i) parameterize soil carbon cycling with changing soil moisture based on the type of minerals present (e.g. amorphous vs primary) and the way organic matter sticks to the minerals (e.g. adsorption vs in a microbial biofilm); (ii) assess carbon storage and turnover along natural gradients of precipitation, soil moisture, and mineralogy, and (iii) quantify changes in carbon storage and turnover in ecosystems impacted by changing wildfire and soil moisture across diverse lithologies. By achieving these objectives, we will have a more complete understanding of the capacity of soils and microbes to hold onto carbon after disturbance in the complex geological landscape of Northern California.
Methods: We employ a variety of field, laboratory, and data synthesis approaches to quantify the impacts of fire and precipitation on soil biogeochemical processes in the Western U.S. This project uses stable light isotopes (13C, 15N) at natural abundance and enriched levels as a tool to track the formation, recycling, and destabilization of carbon in soils. We quantify carbon as it is transformed by soil microorganisms in the lab and in the field by combining bulk (e.g., dissolved organic matter, total carbon, greenhouse gas production), fraction-based (e.g., sequential dissolutions, size and density fractionation), and spatially resolved (scanning electron microscopy, mid-infrared spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy) techniques. Our field sites span gradients in soil age (soil chronosequences), precipitation, and disturbance (wildfire) across diverse lithologies in Northern California to link lab process-based measurements to the landscape scale.
Sampling a marine terrace within the Mattole River soil chronosequence to quantify the impact of simulating soil drying and re-wetting on the release of greenhouse gases. - Science
Arctic Biogeochemical Response to Permafrost Thaw (ABRUPT)
Warming and thawing of permafrost soils in the Arctic is expected to become widespread over the coming decades. Permafrost thaw changes ecosystem structure and function, affects resource availability for wildlife and society, and decreases ground stability which affects human infrastructure. Since permafrost soils contain about half of the global soil carbon (C) pool, the magnitude of C losses...Forest health and drought response
Forests provide society with economically important and often irreplaceable goods and services, such as wood products, carbon sequestration, clean water, biodiversity, and recreational opportunities. Yet hotter droughts (droughts in which unusually high temperatures exacerbate the effects of low precipitation) are projected to increase in frequency and intensity in coming decades, potentially... - Publications
Deconstructing the microbial necromass continuum to inform soil carbon sequestration
Microbial necromass is a large, dynamic and persistent component of soil organic carbon, the dominant terrestrial carbon pool. Quantification of necromass carbon stocks and its susceptibility to global change is becoming standard practice in soil carbon research. However, the typical proxies used for necromass carbon do not reveal the dynamic nature of necromass carbon flows and transformations wiAuthorsKate M Buckeridge, Courtney Creamer, Jeanette WhitakerA combined microbial and ecosystem metric of carbon retention efficiency explains land cover-dependent soil microbial biodiversity–ecosystem function relationships
While soil organic carbon (C) is the foundation of productive and healthy ecosystems, the impact of the ecology of microorganisms on C-cycling remains unknown. We manipulated the diversity, applied here as species richness, of the microbial community present in similar soils on two contrasting land-covers—an adjacent pasture and forest—and observed the transformations of plant detritus and soil orAuthorsJessica G. Ernakovich, Jeffrey R Baldock, Courtney Creamer, Jonathan Sanderman, Karsten Kalbitz, Mark FarrellFrom pools to flow: The PROMISE framework for new insights on soil carbon cycling in a changing world
Soils represent the largest terrestrial reservoir of organic carbon, and the balance between soil organic carbon (SOC) formation and loss will drive powerful carbon‐climate feedbacks over the coming century. To date, efforts to predict SOC dynamics have rested on pool‐based models, which assume classes of SOC with internally homogenous physicochemical properties. However, emerging evidence suggestAuthorsBonnie G. Waring, Benjamin N. Sulman, Sasha C. Reed, A. Peyton Smith, Colin Averill, Courtney Creamer, Daniela F. Cusack, Steven J. Hall, Julie Jastrow, Kenneth M. Kemner, Markus Kleber, Xiao-Jun Allen Liu, Jennifer Pett-Ridge, Marjorie S. SchulzMineralogy dictates the initial mechanism of microbial necromass association
Soil organic matter (SOM) improves soil fertility and mitigates disturbance related to climate and land use change. Microbial necromass (the accumulated cellular residues of microorganisms) comprises the majority of soil C, yet the formation and persistence of necromass in relation to mineralogy is poorly understood. We tested whether soil minerals had different microbial necromass association mecAuthorsCourtney Creamer, Andrea L. Foster, Corey Lawrence, Jack McFarland, Marjorie S. Schulz, Mark Waldrop