In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability

While there are estimates of the abiotic processes contribution to soil phosphorus (P) availability, less is known about the contribution of biological processes. Two main enzymatic processes involved in soil P cycling are known to alter the oxygen isotopic composition of phosphate (δ18O-P), each in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Chiara Pistocchi, Éva Mészáros, Emmanuel Frossard, E. K. Bünemann, Federica Tamburini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-09-01
Series:Frontiers in Environmental Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2020.564778/full
id doaj-ecc8d0e91d6b4c0fb8f37a0b77901762
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ecc8d0e91d6b4c0fb8f37a0b779017622020-11-25T03:12:23ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Environmental Science2296-665X2020-09-01810.3389/fenvs.2020.564778564778In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus AvailabilityChiara Pistocchi0Chiara Pistocchi1Éva Mészáros2Éva Mészáros3Emmanuel Frossard4E. K. Bünemann5E. K. Bünemann6Federica Tamburini7Institute of Agricultural Science, ETH Zürich, Zurich, SwitzerlandEco&Sols, Montpellier SupAgro, Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, INRAE, IRD, Montpellier, FranceInstitute of Agricultural Science, ETH Zürich, Zurich, SwitzerlandDepartment of Biosystems Science and Engineering, ETH Zürich, Basel, SwitzerlandInstitute of Agricultural Science, ETH Zürich, Zurich, SwitzerlandInstitute of Agricultural Science, ETH Zürich, Zurich, SwitzerlandDepartment of Soil Sciences, Research Institute of Organic Agriculture FiBL, Frick, SwitzerlandInstitute of Agricultural Science, ETH Zürich, Zurich, SwitzerlandWhile there are estimates of the abiotic processes contribution to soil phosphorus (P) availability, less is known about the contribution of biological processes. Two main enzymatic processes involved in soil P cycling are known to alter the oxygen isotopic composition of phosphate (δ18O-P), each in a different way, through the cleavage of the P–O bond: the intracellular P turnover and the organic P hydrolysis. The former induces isotopic equilibration between phosphate and water and is considered the major process affecting soil available P via microbial P release. The latter induces depleted δ18O-P in the phosphate released from the mineralization of organic P. We studied P dynamics in organic horizons of two contrasting soils (low- and high-P availability) from temperate beech forests. We labeled the soil with 18O-enriched water and followed changes in the δ18O-P of different soil P pools in the presence or absence of added leaf litter during 3 months of incubation. δ18O-P values of almost all P pools progressively increased indicating oxygen incorporation from the enriched soil water into phosphate via the above-mentioned enzymatic processes. δ18O-P of available P increased more in the P-rich soil than in the P-poor soil and approached the isotopic equilibrium between phosphate and water, revealing the impact of microbial P release into the available P pool. However, in the P-poor soil, the available P brought the isotopic signature induced by phosphatase enzymes, indicating that it was mostly originated from the hydrolysis of organic P. Therefore, under P-limiting conditions, the isotopic effect of organic P hydrolysis can outweigh the isotopic equilibrium effect. Finally, two independent isotopic approaches with 33P and δ18O-P provided very similar estimates of P exchanged between the available P and other inorganic soil pools. This suggests that δ18O-P can be successfully used to trace P fluxes, provided that the underlying processes do not break the P–O bonds of the phosphate molecule.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2020.564778/fullsoilisotopic labelingphosphatasemicrobial phosphorusmineralization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Chiara Pistocchi
Chiara Pistocchi
Éva Mészáros
Éva Mészáros
Emmanuel Frossard
E. K. Bünemann
E. K. Bünemann
Federica Tamburini
spellingShingle Chiara Pistocchi
Chiara Pistocchi
Éva Mészáros
Éva Mészáros
Emmanuel Frossard
E. K. Bünemann
E. K. Bünemann
Federica Tamburini
In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability
Frontiers in Environmental Science
soil
isotopic labeling
phosphatase
microbial phosphorus
mineralization
author_facet Chiara Pistocchi
Chiara Pistocchi
Éva Mészáros
Éva Mészáros
Emmanuel Frossard
E. K. Bünemann
E. K. Bünemann
Federica Tamburini
author_sort Chiara Pistocchi
title In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability
title_short In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability
title_full In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability
title_fullStr In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability
title_full_unstemmed In or Out of Equilibrium? How Microbial Activity Controls the Oxygen Isotopic Composition of Phosphate in Forest Organic Horizons With Low and High Phosphorus Availability
title_sort in or out of equilibrium? how microbial activity controls the oxygen isotopic composition of phosphate in forest organic horizons with low and high phosphorus availability
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Environmental Science
issn 2296-665X
publishDate 2020-09-01
description While there are estimates of the abiotic processes contribution to soil phosphorus (P) availability, less is known about the contribution of biological processes. Two main enzymatic processes involved in soil P cycling are known to alter the oxygen isotopic composition of phosphate (δ18O-P), each in a different way, through the cleavage of the P–O bond: the intracellular P turnover and the organic P hydrolysis. The former induces isotopic equilibration between phosphate and water and is considered the major process affecting soil available P via microbial P release. The latter induces depleted δ18O-P in the phosphate released from the mineralization of organic P. We studied P dynamics in organic horizons of two contrasting soils (low- and high-P availability) from temperate beech forests. We labeled the soil with 18O-enriched water and followed changes in the δ18O-P of different soil P pools in the presence or absence of added leaf litter during 3 months of incubation. δ18O-P values of almost all P pools progressively increased indicating oxygen incorporation from the enriched soil water into phosphate via the above-mentioned enzymatic processes. δ18O-P of available P increased more in the P-rich soil than in the P-poor soil and approached the isotopic equilibrium between phosphate and water, revealing the impact of microbial P release into the available P pool. However, in the P-poor soil, the available P brought the isotopic signature induced by phosphatase enzymes, indicating that it was mostly originated from the hydrolysis of organic P. Therefore, under P-limiting conditions, the isotopic effect of organic P hydrolysis can outweigh the isotopic equilibrium effect. Finally, two independent isotopic approaches with 33P and δ18O-P provided very similar estimates of P exchanged between the available P and other inorganic soil pools. This suggests that δ18O-P can be successfully used to trace P fluxes, provided that the underlying processes do not break the P–O bonds of the phosphate molecule.
topic soil
isotopic labeling
phosphatase
microbial phosphorus
mineralization
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fenvs.2020.564778/full
work_keys_str_mv AT chiarapistocchi inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT chiarapistocchi inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT evameszaros inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT evameszaros inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT emmanuelfrossard inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT ekbunemann inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT ekbunemann inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
AT federicatamburini inoroutofequilibriumhowmicrobialactivitycontrolstheoxygenisotopiccompositionofphosphateinforestorganichorizonswithlowandhighphosphorusavailability
_version_ 1724650736132816896