Authors
Vincent Noël, Kristin Boye, Hannah R Naughton, Emily M Lacroix, Meret Aeppli, Naresh Kumar, Scott Fendorf, Samuel M Webb
Publication date
2024/2/15
Journal
Frontiers in Environmental Chemistry
Volume
5
Pages
1329887
Publisher
Frontiers Media SA
Description
Redox reactions underlie several biogeochemical processes and are typically spatiotemporally heterogeneous in soils and sediments. However, redox heterogeneity has yet to be incorporated into mainstream conceptualizations and modeling of soil biogeochemistry. Anoxic microsites, a defining feature of soil redox heterogeneity, are non-majority oxygen depleted zones in otherwise oxic environments. Neglecting to account for anoxic microsites can generate major uncertainties in quantitative assessments of greenhouse gas emissions, C sequestration, as well as nutrient and contaminant cycling at the ecosystem to global scales. However, only a few studies have observed/characterized anoxic microsites in undisturbed soils, primarily, because soil is opaque and microsites require µm-cm scale resolution over cm-m scales. Consequently, our current understanding of microsite characteristics does not support model parameterization. To resolve this knowledge gap, we demonstrate through this proof-of-concept study that X-ray fluorescence (XRF) 2D mapping can reliably detect, quantify, and provide basic redox characterization of anoxic microsites using solid phase “forensic” evidence. First, we tested and developed a systematic data processing approach to eliminate false positive redox microsites, i.e., artefacts, detected from synchrotron-based multiple-energy XRF 2D mapping of Fe (as a proxy of redox-sensitive elements) in Fe-“rich” sediment cores with artificially injected microsites. Then, spatial distribution of FeII and FeIII species from full, natural soil core slices (over cm-m lengths/widths) were mapped at 1–100 µm resolution. These …
Scholar articles
V Noël, K Boye, HR Naughton, EM Lacroix, M Aeppli… - Frontiers in Environmental Chemistry, 2024