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Integrating Aquatic and Terrestrial Perspectives to Improve Insights Into Organic Matter Cycling at the Landscape Scale

Frontiers in Earth Science 2019 43 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zachary Kayler, Hans‐Peter Grossart Katrin Premke, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Christian Griebler, Jan Siemens, Arthur Geßler, Arthur Geßler, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Yakov Kuzyakov, Hans‐Peter Grossart Jan Siemens, Mark O. Gessner, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Arthur Geßler, Sabine Hilt, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Christian Griebler, Hans‐Peter Grossart Jan Siemens, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Jan Siemens, Sabine Hilt, Christian Griebler, Yakov Kuzyakov, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Leif Klemedtsson, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Hans‐Peter Grossart Markus Reichstein, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart Leif Klemedtsson, Yakov Kuzyakov, Yakov Kuzyakov, Arthur Geßler, Christian Griebler, Jan Siemens, Christian Griebler, Yakov Kuzyakov, Jan Siemens, Kai-Uwe Totsche, Kai-Uwe Totsche, Lars J. Tranvik, Yakov Kuzyakov, Yakov Kuzyakov, Hans‐Peter Grossart Annekatrin Wagner, Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Markus Weitere, Hans‐Peter Grossart Yakov Kuzyakov, Lars J. Tranvik, Christian Griebler, Markus Weitere, Hans‐Peter Grossart Hans‐Peter Grossart

Summary

This review examines how organic matter moves and breaks down at the interfaces between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems at the landscape scale. It is a foundational ecology paper with limited direct relevance to microplastics.

Across a landscape, aquatic-terrestrial interfaces within and between ecosystems are hotspots of organic matter (OM) mineralization. These interfaces are characterized by sharp spatio-temporal changes in environmental conditions, which affect OM properties and thus control OM mineralization and other transformation processes. Consequently, the extent of OM movement at and across aquatic-terrestrial interfaces is crucial in determining OM turnover and carbon (C) cycling at the landscape scale. Here, we propose expanding current concepts in aquatic and terrestrial ecosystem sciences to comprehensively evaluate OM turnover at the landscape scale. We focus on three main concepts toward explaining OM turnover at the landscape scale: the landscape spatio-temporal context, OM turnover described by priming and ecological stoichiometry, and anthropogenic effects as a disruptor of natural OM transfer magnitudes and pathways. A conceptual framework is introduced that allows for discussing the disparities in spatial and temporal scales of OM transfer, changes in environmental conditions, ecosystem connectivity, and microbial–substrate interactions. The potential relevance of priming effects in both terrestrial and aquatic systems is addressed. For terrestrial systems, we hypothesize that the interplay between the influx of OM and its corresponding elemental composition and the elemental demand of the microbial communities – stoichiometric question – may alleviate spatial and metabolic thresholds. In comparison, substrate level OM dynamics may be substantially different in aquatic systems due to matrix effects that accentuate the role of abiotic conditions, substrate quality, and microbial community dynamics. We highlight the disproportionate impact anthropogenic activities can have on OM cycling across the landscape including reversing natural OM flows through the landscape, disrupting ecosystem connectivity, and nutrient additions that cascade across the landscape. This knowledge is crucial for a better understanding of OM cycling in a landscape context, in particular since terrestrial and aquatic compartments may respond differently to the ongoing changes in climate, land use, and other anthropogenic interferences.

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