Lateral and depth variation of loess organic matter overprint related to rhizoliths - Revealed by lipid molecular proxies and X-ray tomography

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OriginalspracheEnglisch
Seiten (von - bis)72-85
Seitenumfang14
FachzeitschriftCATENA
Jahrgang112
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - Jan. 2014
Extern publiziertJa

Abstract

Terrestrial sediments like loess are well known for their paleoenvironmental significance. Although organic carbon contents are commonly very low, loess and organic matter (LOM) thereof is regarded as important terrestrial archive for vegetation and climate during deposition. However, the LOM signal is prone to contamination by OM of other age and origin than the synsedimentary vegetation, e.g. by postsedimentary deep-rooting plants. We hypothesized that the influence of rhizosphere effects related to deep-rooting plants varies with depth in quality, quantity and distance to the former root.The 13. m thick late Pleistocene loess-paleosol sequence at Nussloch (SW Germany) contains rhizoliths (calcified roots) of Holocene age. With the carbonatic encrustation leading to preservation of former root deposits, rhizoliths allow for assessment of rhizosphere processes that occurred during the root's lifetime. Several horizontal transects comprising rhizoliths, surrounding loess (rhizoloess) up to a distance of 11. cm from rhizoliths, and root-free reference loess from different depth intervals, were analyzed for their carbon (C), alkane and fatty acid (FA) composition.Alkane proxies like carbon preference index (CPI), average chain length (ACL), as well as n-C27/n-C31 and n-C29/n-C31 ratios indicated grass vegetation as origin of LOM, while rhizoliths derived from woody vegetation. Several lipid molecular proxies, e.g. short chain/long chain alkanes, long chain alkane composition and long chain/very long chain FA, indicated the incorporation of considerable amounts of root and rhizomicrobial OM. The rhizosphere effect, i.e. postsedimentary overprint of initial LOM in the vicinity of roots, was not restricted to few mm around the former root, but notable to distances of at least 5cm and possibly more. This was confirmed by X-ray tomography analyses enabling identification of small calcified root remains and non-calcified root channels in the former rhizosphere, which could not be identified under field conditions. In depth intervals with high rhizolith frequency, this entailed lateral overprint of large parts of loess, which in depths of 1.95 and 3.2m below present surface can cover the whole loess due to extension of the former rhizosphere of >5cm.Regarding the high rhizolith frequency (maximizing at 200m-2 at ~2.6m depth) at Nussloch, these findings raise the importance of deep-rooting plants as potential source for significant postsedimentary overprint of loess-paleosol sequences.

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Lateral and depth variation of loess organic matter overprint related to rhizoliths - Revealed by lipid molecular proxies and X-ray tomography. / Gocke, Martina; Peth, Stephan; Wiesenberg, Guido L.B.
in: CATENA, Jahrgang 112, 01.2014, S. 72-85.

Publikation: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschungPeer-Review

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title = "Lateral and depth variation of loess organic matter overprint related to rhizoliths - Revealed by lipid molecular proxies and X-ray tomography",
abstract = "Terrestrial sediments like loess are well known for their paleoenvironmental significance. Although organic carbon contents are commonly very low, loess and organic matter (LOM) thereof is regarded as important terrestrial archive for vegetation and climate during deposition. However, the LOM signal is prone to contamination by OM of other age and origin than the synsedimentary vegetation, e.g. by postsedimentary deep-rooting plants. We hypothesized that the influence of rhizosphere effects related to deep-rooting plants varies with depth in quality, quantity and distance to the former root.The 13. m thick late Pleistocene loess-paleosol sequence at Nussloch (SW Germany) contains rhizoliths (calcified roots) of Holocene age. With the carbonatic encrustation leading to preservation of former root deposits, rhizoliths allow for assessment of rhizosphere processes that occurred during the root's lifetime. Several horizontal transects comprising rhizoliths, surrounding loess (rhizoloess) up to a distance of 11. cm from rhizoliths, and root-free reference loess from different depth intervals, were analyzed for their carbon (C), alkane and fatty acid (FA) composition.Alkane proxies like carbon preference index (CPI), average chain length (ACL), as well as n-C27/n-C31 and n-C29/n-C31 ratios indicated grass vegetation as origin of LOM, while rhizoliths derived from woody vegetation. Several lipid molecular proxies, e.g. short chain/long chain alkanes, long chain alkane composition and long chain/very long chain FA, indicated the incorporation of considerable amounts of root and rhizomicrobial OM. The rhizosphere effect, i.e. postsedimentary overprint of initial LOM in the vicinity of roots, was not restricted to few mm around the former root, but notable to distances of at least 5cm and possibly more. This was confirmed by X-ray tomography analyses enabling identification of small calcified root remains and non-calcified root channels in the former rhizosphere, which could not be identified under field conditions. In depth intervals with high rhizolith frequency, this entailed lateral overprint of large parts of loess, which in depths of 1.95 and 3.2m below present surface can cover the whole loess due to extension of the former rhizosphere of >5cm.Regarding the high rhizolith frequency (maximizing at 200m-2 at ~2.6m depth) at Nussloch, these findings raise the importance of deep-rooting plants as potential source for significant postsedimentary overprint of loess-paleosol sequences.",
keywords = "Alkanes, Calcified roots, Fatty acids, Lipid molecular proxies, Paleovegetation, X-ray tomography",
author = "Martina Gocke and Stephan Peth and Wiesenberg, {Guido L.B.}",
note = "Funding Information: This study was financially supported by German Research Foundation (DFG) under contract WI 2810/10-1 . The authors thank the HeidelbergCement AG for giving the permission to sample in their quarries, M. L{\"o}scher for help in the field and B. Jansen (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) for inspiring discussions. Assistance of J. Rostek (University of Kiel, Germany) with tomographic scans as well as help of I. Thaufelder regarding elemental analyses are gratefully acknowledged. K. Pustovoytov (University of Hohenheim, Germany) and an anonymous reviewer gave constructive comments on the manuscript.",
year = "2014",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1016/j.catena.2012.11.011",
language = "English",
volume = "112",
pages = "72--85",
journal = "CATENA",
issn = "0341-8162",
publisher = "Elsevier",

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Lateral and depth variation of loess organic matter overprint related to rhizoliths - Revealed by lipid molecular proxies and X-ray tomography

AU - Gocke, Martina

AU - Peth, Stephan

AU - Wiesenberg, Guido L.B.

N1 - Funding Information: This study was financially supported by German Research Foundation (DFG) under contract WI 2810/10-1 . The authors thank the HeidelbergCement AG for giving the permission to sample in their quarries, M. Löscher for help in the field and B. Jansen (University of Amsterdam, Netherlands) for inspiring discussions. Assistance of J. Rostek (University of Kiel, Germany) with tomographic scans as well as help of I. Thaufelder regarding elemental analyses are gratefully acknowledged. K. Pustovoytov (University of Hohenheim, Germany) and an anonymous reviewer gave constructive comments on the manuscript.

PY - 2014/1

Y1 - 2014/1

N2 - Terrestrial sediments like loess are well known for their paleoenvironmental significance. Although organic carbon contents are commonly very low, loess and organic matter (LOM) thereof is regarded as important terrestrial archive for vegetation and climate during deposition. However, the LOM signal is prone to contamination by OM of other age and origin than the synsedimentary vegetation, e.g. by postsedimentary deep-rooting plants. We hypothesized that the influence of rhizosphere effects related to deep-rooting plants varies with depth in quality, quantity and distance to the former root.The 13. m thick late Pleistocene loess-paleosol sequence at Nussloch (SW Germany) contains rhizoliths (calcified roots) of Holocene age. With the carbonatic encrustation leading to preservation of former root deposits, rhizoliths allow for assessment of rhizosphere processes that occurred during the root's lifetime. Several horizontal transects comprising rhizoliths, surrounding loess (rhizoloess) up to a distance of 11. cm from rhizoliths, and root-free reference loess from different depth intervals, were analyzed for their carbon (C), alkane and fatty acid (FA) composition.Alkane proxies like carbon preference index (CPI), average chain length (ACL), as well as n-C27/n-C31 and n-C29/n-C31 ratios indicated grass vegetation as origin of LOM, while rhizoliths derived from woody vegetation. Several lipid molecular proxies, e.g. short chain/long chain alkanes, long chain alkane composition and long chain/very long chain FA, indicated the incorporation of considerable amounts of root and rhizomicrobial OM. The rhizosphere effect, i.e. postsedimentary overprint of initial LOM in the vicinity of roots, was not restricted to few mm around the former root, but notable to distances of at least 5cm and possibly more. This was confirmed by X-ray tomography analyses enabling identification of small calcified root remains and non-calcified root channels in the former rhizosphere, which could not be identified under field conditions. In depth intervals with high rhizolith frequency, this entailed lateral overprint of large parts of loess, which in depths of 1.95 and 3.2m below present surface can cover the whole loess due to extension of the former rhizosphere of >5cm.Regarding the high rhizolith frequency (maximizing at 200m-2 at ~2.6m depth) at Nussloch, these findings raise the importance of deep-rooting plants as potential source for significant postsedimentary overprint of loess-paleosol sequences.

AB - Terrestrial sediments like loess are well known for their paleoenvironmental significance. Although organic carbon contents are commonly very low, loess and organic matter (LOM) thereof is regarded as important terrestrial archive for vegetation and climate during deposition. However, the LOM signal is prone to contamination by OM of other age and origin than the synsedimentary vegetation, e.g. by postsedimentary deep-rooting plants. We hypothesized that the influence of rhizosphere effects related to deep-rooting plants varies with depth in quality, quantity and distance to the former root.The 13. m thick late Pleistocene loess-paleosol sequence at Nussloch (SW Germany) contains rhizoliths (calcified roots) of Holocene age. With the carbonatic encrustation leading to preservation of former root deposits, rhizoliths allow for assessment of rhizosphere processes that occurred during the root's lifetime. Several horizontal transects comprising rhizoliths, surrounding loess (rhizoloess) up to a distance of 11. cm from rhizoliths, and root-free reference loess from different depth intervals, were analyzed for their carbon (C), alkane and fatty acid (FA) composition.Alkane proxies like carbon preference index (CPI), average chain length (ACL), as well as n-C27/n-C31 and n-C29/n-C31 ratios indicated grass vegetation as origin of LOM, while rhizoliths derived from woody vegetation. Several lipid molecular proxies, e.g. short chain/long chain alkanes, long chain alkane composition and long chain/very long chain FA, indicated the incorporation of considerable amounts of root and rhizomicrobial OM. The rhizosphere effect, i.e. postsedimentary overprint of initial LOM in the vicinity of roots, was not restricted to few mm around the former root, but notable to distances of at least 5cm and possibly more. This was confirmed by X-ray tomography analyses enabling identification of small calcified root remains and non-calcified root channels in the former rhizosphere, which could not be identified under field conditions. In depth intervals with high rhizolith frequency, this entailed lateral overprint of large parts of loess, which in depths of 1.95 and 3.2m below present surface can cover the whole loess due to extension of the former rhizosphere of >5cm.Regarding the high rhizolith frequency (maximizing at 200m-2 at ~2.6m depth) at Nussloch, these findings raise the importance of deep-rooting plants as potential source for significant postsedimentary overprint of loess-paleosol sequences.

KW - Alkanes

KW - Calcified roots

KW - Fatty acids

KW - Lipid molecular proxies

KW - Paleovegetation

KW - X-ray tomography

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DO - 10.1016/j.catena.2012.11.011

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JO - CATENA

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