Chrome Extension
WeChat Mini Program
Use on ChatGLM

Optode-based Chemical Imaging of Laboratory Burned Soil Reveals Millimeter-Scale Heterogeneous Biogeochemical Responses.

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH(2023)

Cited 4|Views18
No score
Abstract
Soil spatial responses to fire are unclear. Using optical chemical sensing with planar 'optodes', pH and dissolved O2 concentration were tracked spatially with a resolution of 360 μm per pixel for 72 h after burning soil in the laboratory with a butane torch (∼1300 °C) and then sprinkling water to simulate a postfire moisture event. Imaging data from planar optodes correlated with microbial activity (quantified via RNA transcripts). Post-fire and post-wetting, soil pH increased throughout the entire ∼13 cm × 17 cm × 20 cm rectangular cuboid of sandy loam soil. Dissolved O2 concentrations were not impacted until the application of water postfire. pH and dissolved O2 both negatively correlated (p < 0.05) with relative transcript expression for galactose metabolism, the degradation of aromatic compounds, sulfur metabolism, and narH. Additionally, dissolved O2 negatively correlated (p < 0.05) with the relative activity of carbon fixation pathways in Bacteria and Archaea, amoA/amoB, narG, nirK, and nosZ. nifH was not detected in any samples. Only amoB and amoC correlated with depth in soil (p < 0.05). Results demonstrate that postfire soils are spatially complex on a mm scale and that using optode-based chemical imaging as a chemical navigator for RNA transcript sampling is effective.
More
Translated text
Key words
Soil Properties
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined