4.5 Article

Advancing chemical lability assessments of organic matter using a synthesis of FT-ICR MS data across diverse environments and experiments

Journal

ORGANIC GEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 184, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.orggeochem.2023.104667

Keywords

Dissolved organic matter; DOM; Petroleum; Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass; spectrometry; Biolability; Photolability; Heterogeneous biolabile material; DOM processing mechanisms

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Patterns in Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) data provide insights into the characteristics of organic matter influenced by natural processes. This study reevaluates the molecular lability boundary (MLB) approach to assess organic matter lability, incorporating new data and considering different experimental conditions. The findings suggest the need to reframe the MLB approach to include lability indices for biotic, thermal, and photochemical processes, and provide a broader perspective on ecosystem form and function trends.
Patterns in Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry (FT-ICR MS) data provide perspective on how organic matter (OM) character is shaped by natural processes. Here, we reevaluate and update the molecular lability boundary (MLB) approach to assess OM lability using a synthesis of FT-ICR MS data. Now included are MLBL (biolability) indices (i.e., the OM proportion of hydrogen-to-carbon ratios >= 1.5) of freshwaters, plant litter and biochar leachates, soils, and oils across the US, trends in OM and dissolved OM (DOM) lability from laboratory experiments examining isolated microbial, photochemical, and thermal degradation, and biogeochemical interpretations of biolability patterns across ecosystems influenced by human activity (e.g., fertilizer addition and agricultural management). Photo-processing increased the hydrogen saturation of OM, describing products of higher biolability (>MLBL values). DOM MLBL values decreased during microbial and thermal degradation processes. Laboratory experiments with isolated treatments showed larger changes in MLBL than exhibited by field samples from systems managed by humans. We interpret changes in N-and/or S -containing DOM above the MLB as the production or use of heterogeneously biolabile material. We interpret heterogeneously labile DOM composition to indicate autochthonous production, biomass growth, nutrient accumulation, or biological degradation in stream and soil samples. The most recent data in our synthesis suggest that the MLB approach should be reframed to provide lability indices for biotic, thermal, and photochemical processes. A broader perspective on lability provides a useful tool to decompose large, complex, and process driven DOM data into more simple and informative indicators of trends in ecosystem form and function.

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