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  4. Consider the Anoxic Microsite: Acknowledging and Appreciating Spatiotemporal Redox Heterogeneity in Soils and Sediments
 
review article

Consider the Anoxic Microsite: Acknowledging and Appreciating Spatiotemporal Redox Heterogeneity in Soils and Sediments

Lacroix, Emily M.
•
Aeppli, Meret  
•
Boye, Kristin
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August 23, 2023
Acs Earth And Space Chemistry

Reduction-oxidation (redox) reactions underlie essentially all biogeochemical cycles. Like most soil properties and processes, redox is spatiotemporally heterogeneous. However, unlike other soil features, redox heterogeneity has yet to be incorporated into mainstream conceptualizations of soil biogeochemistry. Anoxic microsites, the defining feature of redox heterogeneity in bulk oxic soils and sediments, are zones of oxygen depletion in otherwise oxic environments. In this review, we suggest that anoxic microsites represent a critical component of soil function and that appreciating anoxic microsites promises to advance our understanding of soil and sediment biogeochemistry. In sections 1 and 2, we define anoxic microsites and highlight their dynamic properties, specifically anoxic microsite distribution, redox gradient magnitude, and temporality. In section 3, we describe the influence of anoxic microsites on several key elemental cycles, organic carbon, nitrogen, iron, manganese, and sulfur. In section 4, we evaluate methods for identifying and characterizing anoxic microsites, and in section 5, we highlight past and current approaches to modeling anoxic microsites. Finally, in section 6, we suggest steps for incorporating anoxic microsites and redox heterogeneities more broadly into our understanding of soils and sediments.

  • Details
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Type
review article
DOI
10.1021/acsearthspacechem.3c00032
Web of Science ID

WOS:001063451500001

Author(s)
Lacroix, Emily M.
Aeppli, Meret  
Boye, Kristin
Brodie, Eoin
Fendorf, Scott
Keiluweit, Marco
Naughton, Hannah R.
Noel, Vincent
Sihi, Debjani
Date Issued

2023-08-23

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC

Published in
Acs Earth And Space Chemistry
Subjects

Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

•

Geochemistry & Geophysics

•

Chemistry

•

anoxic microsite

•

oxygen

•

soil

•

biogeochemistry

•

redox heterogeneity

•

nitrous-oxide emissions

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preferential flow paths

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organic-matter

•

microbial communities

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oxygen availability

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anaerobic ammonium

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field-measurements

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methane oxidation

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self-organization

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anammox bacteria

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
SOIL  
Available on Infoscience
October 9, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/201500
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