溶解有机碳
背景(考古学)
生物群
生态学
环境科学
生态系统
持久性(不连续性)
有机质
食物链
生物
地质学
古生物学
岩土工程
作者
Thorsten Dittmar,Sinikka T. Lennartz,Hagen Buck‐Wiese,Dennis A. Hansell,Chiara Santinelli,Chiara Vanni,Bernd Blasius,Jan‐Hendrik Hehemann
标识
DOI:10.1038/s43017-021-00183-7
摘要
Marine dissolved organic matter (DOM) contains more carbon than the combined stocks of Earth’s biota. Organisms in the ocean continuously release a myriad of molecules that become food for microheterotrophs, but, for unknown reasons, a residual fraction persists as DOM for millennia. In this Perspective, we discuss and compare two concepts that could explain this persistence. The long-standing ‘intrinsic recalcitrance’ paradigm attributes DOM stability to inherent molecular properties. In the ‘emergent recalcitrance’ concept, DOM is continuously transformed by marine microheterotrophs, with recalcitrance emerging on an ecosystems level. Both concepts are consistent with observations in the modern ocean, but they imply very different responses of the DOM pool to climate-related changes. To better understand DOM persistence, we propose a new overarching research strategy — the ecology of molecules — that integrates the concepts of intrinsic and emergent recalcitrance with the ecological and environmental context.
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