Abstract
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) is the main energy source for marine heterotrophic microorganisms, but a small fraction of DOC resists microbial degradation and accumulates in the ocean. The reason behind this recalcitrance is unknown. We test whether the long-term stability of DOC requires the existence of structurally refractory molecules, using a mechanistic model comprising a diverse network of microbe-substrate interactions. Model experiments reproduce three salient observations, even when all DOC compounds are equally degradable: (i) >15% of an initial DOC pulse resists degradation, but is consumed by microbes if concentrated, (ii) the modelled deep-sea DOC reaches stable concentrations of 30–40 mmolC/m3, and (iii) the mean age of deep-sea DOC is several times the age of deep water with a wide range from <100 to >10,000 years. We conclude that while structurally-recalcitrant molecules exist, they are not required in the model to explain either the amount or longevity of DOC.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Dissolved organic carbon (DOC) represents one of the Earth’s major carbon pools. It contains a similar amount of carbon as the atmosphere and exceeds the amount of carbon bound in marine biomass by more than two-hundred times1. DOC is mainly produced in the near-surface layers during primary production and grazing processes2. Other sources of marine DOC are dissolution from particles2, terrestrial and hydrothermal vent input3, and microbial production. Prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea) contribute to the DOC pool via release of capsular material, exopolymers, and hydrolytic enzymes2, as well as via mortality (e.g. “viral shunt”). Prokaryotes are also the main decomposers of DOC, although for some of the most recalcitrant forms of DOC very slow abiotic degradation in hydrothermal systems2 or possibly sorption to sinking particles4 may be the main removal mechanism. Mechanistic knowledge about DOC-microbe-interactions is crucial to understand the cycling and distribution of this active carbon reservoir.
DOC is conceptually divided into labile DOC, which is rapidly taken up by heterotrophic microbes, and the recalcitrant DOC reservoir, which has accumulated in the ocean (following the definition by Hansell4). As a consequence of its recalcitrance, the accumulated DOC reaches average radiocarbon ages of ~1,000–4,000 years in surface waters and ~3,000–6,000 years in the deep ocean5, indicating that it persists through several deep ocean mixing cycles of ~300–1,400 years each6. Behind these average radiocarbon ages, a large spectrum of ages is hidden: Follett et al.7 showed that DOC comprises a fraction of modern radiocarbon age, as well as DOC reaching radiocarbon ages of up to 12,000 years.
The surprising resistance of high concentrations of DOC to microbial degradation has been addressed by several hypotheses (e.g. Dittmar8). The prevalent notion is that the recalcitrant fraction of DOC has certain chemical properties, which prevent decomposition by microbes (“intrinsic stability hypothesis”). An alternative or additional explanation is given by the “dilution hypothesis”, that all compounds are labile, but exist in concentrations individually too low to sustain microbial populations but collectively form a large pool9. The dilution hypothesis found support in recent experimental and theoretical studies10,11, which sparked a vivid discussion of its plausibility5,12,13,14,15,16. To date, little is known about the substrate affinity of microbes towards DOC compounds17, therefore both the intrinsic stability of compounds and dilution limitation are possible scenarios.
Various models have been used to approach the unanswered questions regarding the stability and decomposition of dissolved organic matter (DOM), i.e. of dissolved organic carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus. In existing DOM models, DOM stability is assumed to result from either intrinsic recalcitrance (RDOCt18) or dilution limitation (RDOCc18). Intrinsic recalcitrance is reflected in DOM models in the form of a DOM fraction unavailable to microbial degradation19,20,21,22, a fraction of DOC which is assumed to be less degradable23,24,25, or in distinct DOM pools with fixed life-times and no exchange between them1,26. Dilution limitation is incorporated into DOM models in the form of a lower concentration limit, below which microbial uptake of DOM is suppressed14,22.
The objective of our study was to numerically evaluate long-term (years to millennia) DOC stability and dynamics in a theoretical scenario of complete neutrality of compounds. We model DOC dynamics by neglecting any structural reactivity differences among compounds. We test whether this extreme scenario can lead to a realistic size and age of the DOC pool, despite the lack of any abiotic stabilization mechanism of DOC. In contrast to existing models, we model the dynamics of DOC and microbes without assuming intrinsic recalcitrance, and without a mathematical formulation of a concentration limit for microbial DOC uptake. The uptake of individual DOC constituents is slowed down at low concentrations, according to the well-established Michaelis-Menten kinetic (e.g. Polimene et al.23, Grégoire et al.27), but it is not suppressed completely, as long as the microbial population persists. In this regard, the model is different from the “dilution hypothesis”10, which proposes a fixed lower limit of bulk DOC below which no DOC uptake can take place. Our experiments are not designed or intended to prove or disprove the existence of structurally-recalcitrant molecules, which exist in the ocean for example in the form of black carbon28,29. The aim of this study is to explore the possible implications of a large diversity of equally reactive compounds on the size and age of the marine DOC pool.
We emphasize that simplification is one of the crucial steps in model formulation, allowing to identify causal relationships within complex systems by purposefully excluding most of the natural variety and focusing on selected key processes. Therefore, our model neglects abiotic production and removal processes, direct interaction among microbes, and higher trophic levels, for example. By representing intricate geochemical and ecological interactions in a simplified but mechanistic manner, our model helps to identify fundamental and emergent properties the DOC reservoir that serve to guide further observations and experiments.
We model the degradation and accumulation of marine DOC, assuming a large network of DOC compounds and microbes (Fig. 1). The microbes take up DOC, fix a fraction of that carbon into their biomass, respire a fraction of it to inorganic carbon (CO2), and release the remaining carbon as transformed DOC compounds back to the DOC pool. Microbes also contribute to the formation of DOC via lysis. New DOC is supplied from unspecified sources external to the microbe-resource network, which may include primary production, particle dissolution, or hydrothermal vents.
The model comprises a variety of “microbial units”, which each take up and release a specific set out of the modelled “DOC compound units”. A microbial unit is here defined as the group of heterotrophic bacteria or archaea that can take up the same groups of compounds. The DOC compounds are grouped hypothetically by structural properties, which govern uptake. Each microbial unit takes up and releases a specific set of compound units, forming a complex, bipartite network of DOC-microbe-interactions (see Material and Methods for an illustrative example). Assuming neutral reactivity, we neglect any reactivity differences among the DOC compounds. Accordingly, the uptake rate of a compound depends exclusively on its concentration (Michaelis-Menten kinetic). At low concentrations, the uptake is slower, but there is no physiological lower limit for microbial DOC uptake. Published estimates served as a basis for the parameterization of e.g. the uptake and mortality rate of microbes (for details see Materials and Methods). Unfortunately, the exact values of the model parameters are poorly constrained for marine organisms, especially for the deep sea and for archaea. To address this uncertainty, we tested the sensitivity of model results using a range of model parameters.
We aim to reproduce essential features of DOC in the ocean with our conceptual model. The model should thus be in agreement with the following observations concerning DOC: (i) microheterotrophs form recalcitrant DOC30,31,32,33, which is (ii) taken up if concentrated10, (iii) DOC concentrations range between 30–80 mmolC/m3 in the ocean1,34, and (iv) DOC shows a broad spectrum of radiocarbon ages in the deep sea from 10 to ~10,000 years7. Targets of our numerical model are not short-term dynamics of DOC turnover, e.g. during and after a phytoplankton bloom. On these time scales, the affinity of microbial taxa to specific substrate compounds is clearly important. For the purpose of our study we purposefully refrain from ascribing different affinities to different DOC compounds, in order to test the explanatory power of a model with neutral reactivity.
Results and Discussion
Formation of recalcitrant DOC in incubation experiments
The amount of (apparently) recalcitrant DOC is determined after 100 simulation years of degradation of an initial DOC pulse (Fig. 2). This is done for three different scenarios: (a) no supply of DOC compounds from primary production, representing a bottle experiment, (b) low supply of DOC, representing low nutrient regions, and (c) high supply of DOC, representing bloom conditions.
DOC and microbial biomass concentrations are in the range of observed values for each of the three scenarios (Fig. 2). Without any DOC supply, the percentage of recalcitrant DOC (~16% of initially provided DOC, corresponding to 13 mmolC/m3) is comparable to experimental results (5–10% for simple substrates30,31,32; 35–80% for more diverse substrates32,33). The model is designed to study the long-term stability of DOC in the ocean, and it is parameterized according to published values for deep-sea microbial communities. As such, it overestimates the time scale of initial DOC consumption (~200 simulated days, reported degradation time-scales are ~3–21 days30,31,32,33). Due to the limited amount of carbon available in the scenario of no supply, the microbial community continuously declines in biomass and becomes vanishingly small after about one year.
For low and high DOC supply rates, the DOC concentration after 100 simulation years is close to values observed in the deep Pacific Ocean (~43% of initial DOC, corresponding to 35 mmolC/m3 1). The final microbial biomass is close to values observed for free-living bacteria in the bathypelagic ocean (0.12 mmolC/m3 35), for the low-supply-scenario and in the range of values observed for the epipelagic ocean (1.21 mmolC/m3 35), for the high-supply-scenario (see Supplement Fig. S1 for the concentration distribution of compounds at the end of the simulation).
Our model shows the formation of an (apparently) recalcitrant DOC pool from bioavailable DOC. At the end of the virtual incubations, a significant fraction of the initial DOC concentration is left, independent of the supply rate (Fig. 2, high or low DOC supply). The microbial production of a heterogeneous mixture of recalcitrant DOC compounds has been observed in laboratory experiments30,31.
Recalcitrance of DOC in the model results from two different mechanisms: (a) if there is no supply of DOC, the microbes go almost extinct after the initial bloom and thus “leave behind” a residual concentration of DOC, and (b) if there is supply of DOC, microbes maintain a stable population on the long-term and therefore the DOC concentration reaches a steady-state where uptake, release, and supply are balanced (see double-logarithmic inlays in Fig. 2).
On a time scale of years to decades, the amount of recalcitrant DOC depends on the supply rate (Fig. 2). The reported accumulation of DOC in the surface layer of the Atlantic Ocean depends on the rate of New Primary Production36. Our model is in agreement with this observation: on short time scales (<50 years, i.e. shorter than the residence time of surface water), DOC concentrations increase with its supply rate. On longer time-scales, however, the amount of (apparently) recalcitrant DOC does not depend on the supply rate (Fig. 2A,C). In the future centuries, increased levels of CO2 in the atmosphere might enhance the algal production of DOM37,38, and thus the supply rate of DOC. Experiments showed that there is no significant change in DOC concentration under increased CO2 levels39. Our model supports this observation: increased primary production, represented by elevated supply rates, does not affect long-term DOC concentrations. However, it increases the microbial biomass by orders of magnitude (Fig. 2B,C, and Supplement Fig. S2J). The “additional” DOC from increased primary production is thus partially stored in the biomass of consumers.
Size of the DOC reservoir: A sensitivity analysis
To assess the sensitivity of the DOC reservoir to model parameters, we determine the steady-state DOC concentration for a range of parameter values (Fig. 3, see supplement for a sensitivity analysis of microbial biomass, mean DOC age, and other model parameters, Fig. S2, Fig. S3, Fig. S4). While one parameter is varied, the others are kept at their default value. Overall, the size of the DOC reservoir changes by a factor of about 0.5–1.5 across all tested parameter ranges. The model results are thus robust to moderate variation of the parameters. Large deviations only occur when varying parameters by orders of magnitude. The model predicts steady-state DOC concentrations between 17–74 mmolC/m3, covering the range of marine DOC observations1,34.
Increasing parameters that fuel microbial growth (i.e. maximum uptake rate ρ, the proportion of substrates taken up per microbe nU/n, and the microbial growth efficiency) decreases the size of the DOC reservoir (Fig. 3A, and Supplement Fig. S4). In contrast, increasing parameters that constrain microbial biomass (i.e. mortality rate µ and half-saturation constant κ) increases the size of the DOC reservoir (Fig. 3B, and Supplement Fig. S4).
The size of the DOC reservoir also increases with the diversity of DOC compounds (number of DOC compound units n, Fig. 3C). The microbial community reduces the concentration of a DOC compound until the energetic costs for survival and maintenance (i.e. respiration, mortality) exceed the amount of carbon gained through uptake of this compound unit (according to resource competition theory40). Each compound is therefore left over at its limiting concentration (i.e. the equilibrium DOC level D*). The higher the DOC diversity, the more compounds at their individual limiting concentrations add up to a larger total DOC pool.
It might seem surprising that the supply rate of DOC does not affect the steady-state DOC concentration (Fig. 3D). However, because DOC is supplied at a constant rate, microbes adapt to this level of carbon available and are able to maintain higher levels of biomass (see Supplement Fig. S2F). Hence, the supplied carbon is converted to microbial biomass, leaving the steady-state DOC concentration unaltered. Note that while this is true on long time-scales (millennia, or steady-state, respectively), on short time-scales (years to decades) the size of the DOC reservoir depends on the amount of supply from primary production (Fig. 2A).
We identified the number of compound units n, the number of compounds taken up per microbial unit nU, and the half-saturation constant κ as important factors for the steady-state DOC concentration, while being the least constrained by published referenced values. An increase in the number of compound units n can be “compensated” (i.e. the steady-state DOC concentration can be preserved) by either an increase in the number of taken-up compound units per microbial unit nU by the same factor, or a proportional decrease in the half-saturation constant κ (see Supplement Fig. S5C).
For a general overview of the sensitivity of the DOC concentration to parameter variations at steady-state we take advantage of the mean field theory. According to this theory, our interactive network model collapses into a simple equation if total neutrality is assumed (see supplement for details). In that case, the size of the DOC reservoir in steady-state D* can be estimated as
This equation summarizes the influence of model parameters on the long-term DOC concentration D*. It is proportional to mortality rate µ, the half-saturation constant of DOC uptake κ, and the diversity of DOC compounds n. The long-term DOC concentration is constrained by the microbial growth efficiency η, the maximum uptake rate ρ, and the number of compound units consumed per microbial unit nU.
Note that the equilibrium DOC level D* is not a parameter of the model, but a consequence of the basic ecological processes that were modelled. This simple equation describes the long-term DOC concentration based on the turnover of an average DOC compound by an average microbial unit. For other, more detailed model outcomes, e.g. the distribution of concentration across compounds and microbes, or the age distribution of DOC, the full network model is required. The equilibrium concentration D*, which can be derived without simulation, is a minimum DOC estimate. In the case of non-neutral DOC uptake (reactivity classes in alternative model set-up, see supplement), the final DOC concentration is equal to or higher than D*. Substrate diversity in relation to microbial uptake capabilities (n/nU) emerges as one of the key drivers that determine the size of the DOC pool in the ocean. At a fixed microbial uptake capability (fixed number of DOC compound units taken up per bacterial unit nU), an increase in DOC compound diversity implies an increase in the long-term DOC concentration D*.
Millennial scale stability of DOC
To approximate the persistence of DOC in the ocean, the radiocarbon age of DOC compounds is simulated in an isolated, Lagrangian water parcel moving along the deep oceanic circulation (Fig. 4). The total supply rate of DOC is variable over time, to mimic the changes between the rapid DOC supply in surface waters and the much slower DOC supply in the deep-sea. To reflect the selective production of DOC compounds by an algal bloom, only a subset of compounds is supplied (3 out of 100, value chosen to represent a scenario where most compounds are exclusively produced by microbial consumers).
The concentration of DOC and microbial biomass in the overturning cycles is close to observations. During the surface-supply-regime, the total DOC concentration corresponds to values observed in most of the surface and mesopelagic ocean1,34 (Fig. 5A,B; see Supplement Fig. S6 for biomass). During the transition from the surface to the deep-sea supply regime, the DOC concentration slowly decreases to values representative for North Pacific deep waters1. The dynamics of DOC are slightly different among the overturning cycles, indicating that the duration of one overturning cycle did not allow for complete equilibration of the system within one cycle.
The mean DOC age increases over time, until it equilibrates after about 20 cycles at an age of ~8,200 years (Fig. 5D,E). The DOC age temporarily decreases at the start of each new overturning cycle, as the water parcel receives high rates of new DOC with zero ‘age’. The difference in the age of surface DOC (~5,800 years, Fig. 5C) and deep sea DOC (~8,000 years, Fig. 5F) is similar to the age difference observed in the ocean (~1,000–3,000 years5). The age of DOC compounds in the model ranges from less than hundred to several thousand years (~80–11,000 years). The age spectrum of modelled DOC compounds is thus in agreement with observations of marine DOC, which shows a broad spectrum of radiocarbon ages from modern up to 12,000 years3,7.
Two groups of compounds can be distinguished by their mean ages (Fig. 5C,E,F): compounds that reach ages of ~80–280 years, i.e. centennial compounds (depicted in red in Fig. 5E), and compounds that reach ages of 6,000–11,000 years, i.e. millennial compounds (depicted in blue in Fig. 5E). The centennial compounds comprise those three compound groups that are supplied from external sources such as primary production. The millennial compounds comprise all other compounds, which are exclusively produced by microbes, at much lower rates. The modelled age spectrum thus emerges from differences in the supply rate of compounds (i.e. their rate of autotrophic production). Note that our simulated microbes do not distinguish between the centennial and millennial compounds during uptake or release. The uptake and release network is constructed randomly, without any preference for the two compound groups. A microbe in the model could be able to take up centennial along with millennial compounds, depending on the random outcome of the network. The bi-modal age distribution in the simulation (Fig. 5C,F) is consistent with observations7. The relative width of the two age peaks and their distinctiveness is set by the difference in the supply rate of the respective compounds.
The more microbial reworking is needed to form a compound from algal-produced DOC, the older it becomes. In this sense, our model is in agreement with the processes termed the “microbial carbon pump”: DOC with high mean ages is produced by microbes41. The variation in ages within the two age classes is explained by the uptake and release within the network of compounds and degrading microbes. Within the microbial compounds (average age of ~8,000 years), for example, some compounds are relatively younger, showing ages of only ~6,000 years. Those compounds are direct release products of microheterotrophs which consume fresh, algal DOC. The age of a compound is thus a consequence of its supply rate and its position in the network of uptake and release preferences. This mechanism could explain observed DOC spectra additional to the traditional view that the observed age spectrum of DOC compounds arises from differences in intrinsic reactivity of DOC compounds42.
Age fractions of observed marine DOC show distinct structural properties: Fresh DOC compounds are larger, have a lower C:N ratio, and a higher percentage of common biochemicals than aged DOC compounds42,43. This co-occurrence of structural and age differences does not necessarily require the assumption of intrinsic compound stability. If structurally different compound classes differ in production rates, the structural signature will be reflected in the age fractions. Hence, if we assume a general decrease in size from highly-produced compounds (e.g. algal DOM) to low-produced compounds (e.g. hydrothermal DOM44), then aged, modelled compounds will be smaller in molecular size than young compounds. Indeed, algal DOM has been shown to be relatively large, whereas hydrothermally altered DOM shows decreased molecular mass. Accordingly, the model results can be reconciled with the size-reactivity-continuum43.
Implications for DOC stability
The mechanism behind the longevity of DOC in the model
Although we assume bioavailability of all compounds, the model predicts long-lived fractions of DOC (Fig. 5). Usually, it is assumed that microbially-produced DOC in the ocean persists over millennia, because bacteria alter its structure, making it intrinsically stable16,42 (see Supplement Fig. S7 for a comparison to Shen & Benner’s experiment). However, in our model, microheterotrophs cannot alter the reactivity of DOC compounds. Instead, microbes exclusively re-distribute the carbon among the compounds (through the network of uptake and release) and reduce DOC concentration (through respiration).
Ultimately, the longevity of DOC in our model can be explained by the limitation of microbial growth by low DOC concentrations. This corresponds to the well-known resource competition theory of Tilman: Analogous to the R* value, that gives “the levels to which each competitor can reduce a single limiting resource”40, we propose a D* value, the minimum DOC concentration that can be reached by biological degradation. For a scenario of neutrality, D* can be estimated from Eq. 1, otherwise the full network model is required. D* is reached when the growth of the microheterotrophs balances their mortality, and when the production of DOC (i.e. the sum of supply, release, and lysis) balances its biological degradation. In this steady-state, DOC concentrations and biomasses equilibrate, such that net changes become zero. This equilibrium DOC level does not allow for further microbial growth and biomass increase; hence DOC is (apparently) recalcitrant.
If the equilibrium DOC level D* is surpassed via supply of DOC compounds from an external source, the formerly recalcitrant DOC allows for microbial growth10 (see Supplement Fig. S8). Through this process, recalcitrant deep-sea DOC can be microbially removed near the ocean surface, as reported e.g. by Cherrier et al.45 (the authors of this study suggest photodegradation causes this removal, here we offer an alternative explanation). According to the notation of Jiao et al.18, the equilibrium DOC level D* would correspond to the RDOCc, defined as “compounds that may be inaccessible to microbes due to their extremely low concentration“. Assumptions about RDOCt (“compounds that are resistant to microbial consumption in certain environments, but subject to further cleaving and decomposition when the situation changes”18) are not required to form a recalcitrant carbon pool at concentrations close to observed values for experiments and the deep sea in our model.
Intrinsic stability: An alternative model set-up
Additional to our neutral model set-up, we implemented an alternative model set-up comprising the five traditional reactivity classes of DOC (labile, semi-labile, semi-refractory, refractory, and ultra-refractory4). In this alternative model set-up, intrinsic reactivity differences are implemented by successively reducing the maximum uptake rate by an order of magnitude for each less reactive DOC class (Supplementary material, Fig. S9). The supply of DOC is restricted to the labile DOC class, i.e. recalcitrant DOC is exclusively microbially-produced. In this alternative model set-up, DOC concentration does not reach a steady-state, but increases due to ongoing accumulation of the least reactive DOC classes (i.e. refractory and ultra-refractory DOC). Applied to the ocean, this would imply an increase of DOC concentrations with each ocean overturning. To achieve an equilibrium DOC level in this “intrinsic stability model”, additional abiotic removal process to microbial consumption would have to be postulated, e.g. adsorption to sinking particles or photodegradation in the sunlit ocean4.
Main findings
We use a network model of DOC-microbe-interactions to predict long-term DOC behaviour. In our model all DOC compounds are equally bioavailable. Our numerical model is in agreement with observed characteristics of marine DOC (Table 1).
In our model, a significant fraction of the bioavailable DOC resists microbial degradation, forming an apparently recalcitrant DOC pool. A fundamental microbiological principle prevents further degradation of DOC at low concentrations: microbial growth ceases when the concentration-dependent uptake of DOC balances the concentration-independent microbial carbon loss via mortality or maintenance, resulting in an equilibrium DOC level (D*). Consequently, the apparently recalcitrant DOC becomes available for microbial degradation, if concentrated. Under the assumption of complete neutrality, D* can be estimated through an extended version of the Michaelis-Menten concept where substrate diversity and microbial capabilities (n/nU) play a central role (Eq. 1).
We show that the size of the modelled DOC reservoir corresponds to observations in the deep ocean. Individual, equally bioavailable DOC compounds reach radiocarbon ages between modern and several thousand years. The age of DOC compounds in our model is not determined by intrinsic reactivity, but by their position in the network of microbial uptake and release, and, most importantly, by their rate of supply from primary production. Overall, our results indicate that the long-term stability of marine DOC emerges from basic physiological properties of the individual members of the degrading microbial community, and the resulting interactions between the individual microbial members through substrate units. As such, DOM stability is possibly neither a direct consequence of intrinsic recalcitrance, nor simply due to a fixed dilution threshold. The aim of this modelling study was not to prove or disprove the existence of intrinsically recalcitrant features in DOC, but to show that assuming neutral, concentration-limited uptake, a realistic size and age of the DOC reservoir can be reached.
Methods
Model equations
We consider m taxonomic units of microheterotrophs Bi (i = 1, 2, …, m) and n substrate units of DOC compounds Dj (j = 1, 2, …, n). Our model resolves the carbon concentration (in mmolC/m3) of these microbial units and DOC compounds in a mixed culture. Microbial units are measured in units of carbon to avoid stoichiometric conversion between the state variables. Modelled processes are summarized in Fig. 1. The model is composed of a set of ordinary differential equations, one for each individual microbial unit Bi and one for each DOC compound unit Dj (see Supplementary Material Equation (4) for the inorganic carbon pool I, equations (5–13) for the radiocarbon age, and Table S1 for a list of symbols and abbreviations):
From the DOC uptake, a fraction η is fixed into microbial biomass, the fraction β(1 − η) is released back to the DOC pool as transformed compounds, and the remaining carbon is permanently transferred to the inorganic carbon pool (i.e. microbial respiration). DOC uptake is described according to the Michaelis-Menten kinetic, with the maximum uptake rate ρ and the half-saturation constant к. We assume that each substrate unit is concentration-limited individually. This means, if unit A is present at high concentrations and unit B at low concentrations, the former is taken up at high rates, while the uptake of the latter is concentration limited. Mortality of microbes is proportional to mortality rate μ and contributes to the formation of transformed DOC compounds. New DOC is supplied at the rate s from primary production (where the total supply rate s = ∑sj is the sum of the supply rates for individual compounds sj). The uptake matrix U = (Uij) defines the uptake preferences of each microbial unit i, its entries Uij specify whether a microbial unit can take up a compound unit j (Uij > 0). The release matrix R = (Rij) defines a specific set of release products for each microbial unit, as well as the partitioning of carbon among the release products. Its entries Rij specify the fraction of carbon released per compound unit. Together, U and R form a “transformation network”, as the taken-up carbon is re-distributed among DOC compounds for release. Altogether, the total microbial biomass, the total DOC concentration, and the inorganic carbon concentration (ΣBi, ΣDj, I) form a mass-conserving carbon pool.
How the model works: an illustrative model set-up
To illustrate the basic model behaviour, we present a toy set-up, with a small number of microbial and compound units (Fig. 6). Initially, the DOC compound unit D1 is provided as the only substrate (Fig. 6C). Initially, biomass of all microbial units is very low (Fig. 6D). The microbial unit B1 takes up the initially provided compound unit D1 (according to the uptake matrix in Fig. 6A, row 1, column 1), and transforms it into DOC compound units D2 and D3 (in a ratio of 9:1, according to the release matrix in Fig. 6B, row 1, column 2 and 3). The microbial units B2 and B3 start to grow on the newly produced compound units. B3 reaches a higher maximum biomass than B2, because it is able to grow on both compound units D2 and D3. The microbial unit B3 produces the compound units D4 and D5, which serves as a substrate for the last blooming microbial unit B4. This microbial unit releases carbon in the form of D3 (40%) and the initially provided compound unit D1 (60%), thereby closing the cycle of DOC re-working. The compound unit D5 remains at concentrations near zero throughout the virtual incubation, because it is produced only at 20% by a single microbial unit (B3), and it is taken up by all other three microbial units (B1, B2, B4). Due to the respiration of organic carbon to inorganic carbon (time series not shown) the total concentration of DOC declines over time. There is no supply of DOC in this virtual incubation.
This simulated initial DOC decomposition qualitatively matches observations. It has been shown experimentally that a sequence of microbial groups with distinct functional and transporter profiles occur during decomposition of algal-derived organic matter; as the substrates become available successively and enable different ecological niches to be filled46.
Default parameterization
The model parameters were chosen according to published reference values, if available (Table 2). Note that some of the parameters (e.g. the total number of compound units n, the half-saturation constant κ, and the number of compound units taken up per microbial unit nU) are not well-constrained and the chosen parameter set has a high level of uncertainty. To account for this, we tested the sensitivity of steady-state total DOC, microbial biomass, and mean DOC age (see Fig. 3 and Supplement Figs. S2, S3) for each parameter. Microbial traits are assumed to be equal, apart from the uptake- and release abilities, i.e. all microbial units are assigned the same mortality rate, maximum uptake rate, half-saturation constant, and they take up and release the same number of compound units.
Number of compounds, microbial units, substrates, and release products (n, m, n U, n R)
Marine microbes are highly diverse: Huber et al.47 estimated the presence of >35,000 marine operational taxonomic units. The molecular diversity of DOC compounds is also high: Zark et al.48 estimated that >100,000 different dissolved organic matter compounds exist in seawater. To increase computational efficiency, the diversity of both groups is reduced for numerical simulations. However, the diversity ratio (0.35: 1) is maintained by grouping marine microbes to a total of 35 microbial units, and DOC compounds to 100 compound units, respectively. Note that we define the compound units from a bacterial perspective: all compounds that can be taken up by the same physiological uptake mechanism (e.g. transporter proteins) are grouped together, i.e. in our model molecular structural details only matter if they are relevant in a physiological context. As published estimates are missing, we assume that a microbial unit can take up 3% of the compound units, and releases 30% of the compound units, reflecting the observation that organic matter is diversified by microbial degradation31,49. Note that the absolute numbers of m, n, nU, and nR are not crucial in the context of the model, as long as their proportion and their relation with the uptake parameters is considered: the steady-state DOC concentration is independent of the number of microbial units (Fig. S5A), but is influenced strongly by the ratio nU/n (Fig. S5B) and the half-saturation constant κ (Fig. S5C, see also discussion of size of DOC reservoir). For example, the diversity of DOC and microbes could be increased proportionally by an order of magnitude (m = 350, n = 1050, nU = 30), however, this would only increase the size of the uptake- and release network, and leave the long-term DOC concentration D* unaffected (see Eq. (1)).
Fractionation of uptake to biomass, release, and respiration (η, β)
We assume that the amount of carbon taken up by a microbe is split across three different pathways: the fraction η is assigned to microbial growth, the fraction β(1 − η) is released as transformed DOC, and the remaining fraction (1 − η)(1 − β) is respired (i.e. the carbon is permanently assigned to the inorganic carbon pool). Estimates from experimental studies are available for microbial growth efficiency, which we use to choose η (BGE = 0.09–0.3350,51). Note that productivity measurements are unlikely to record the released material, thus underestimating growth efficiency50 and potentially biasing the estimate. The fraction of carbon uptake that is released β(1 − η) was chosen based on observations by Ogawa et al.30, who found that 15% of taken up glucose was released as DOC after 2 days of incubation in experiments, and 13% for glutamate. The microbial growth efficiency could be reduced to account for additional energy required for the degradation of high molecular mass compounds via extracellular hydrolysis17. A reduction of the growth efficiency associated with the uptake of a fraction of DOC compounds by 10% would increase the long-term equilibrium concentration of this fraction by 10% (as given in Eq. (1)).
Microbial uptake and mortality (ρ, κ, μ)
Estimates for uptake parameters representative for the highly diverse microbial community of the global oceans are lacking to date, therefore uptake parameters were based on laboratory estimates of a facultatively oligotrophic marine ultramicrobacterium growing on either alanine or glucose in the absence of primary producers and grazers, yielding a maximum uptake rate ρ = 0.96–3.60 d−1 and a half-saturation constant κ = 6–450 mmolC/m3 52. The model results are qualitatively robust towards variation of these parameters by a factor of 0.5 to 1.5 (Fig. 3A for uptake rate, Fig. S4D for half-saturation constant). As the published estimates vary by nearly two orders of magnitude, the half-saturation constant κ is not well-constrained. Changes in the value of κ can be balanced by proportional changes in the ratio of compounds taken up per microbial unit to the total DOC diversity nU/n (see Supplementary Figure S5). Note that this parameter choice likely overestimates microbial DOC consumption compared to oceanic conditions, yielding a conservative minimum estimate of the DOC reservoir size. It should also be noted that if uptake rates were assumed different among components, their individual long-term concentration would change accordingly, whereas the total DOC concentration would rather depend on the average over consumption rates. The mortality of microbes is assumed linearly proportional to their biomass, with a mortality rate μ = 0.02 d−1. Laboratory experiments with planktonic microbes showed specific mortality rates of 0.009–0.025 d−1 53 in the absence of grazers, similar to rates used in other modelling studies (0.031–0.05 d−1 19,23).
Supply of DOC (s)
Based on a labile DOC production in the ocean of 25 PgC/y = 5.71 × 1015 mmolC/d4, euphotic zone depth of 200 m, and global ocean surface area of 3.62 × 108 km2 54, the total supply rate of DOC s in the surface layer is assumed to be 3.45 × 10−7 PgC km−3 y−1 = 0.08 mmolC m−3 d−1. Unless otherwise stated, the supply of DOC is distributed evenly across all DOC compound units (see Supplement Fig. S11 for the influence of supply diversity on the DOC concentration, microbial biomass, and mean DOC age). For the simulation of mean DOC age (Fig. 5), we restricted the supply of DOC to 3% of compounds, to reflect a scenario where phytoplankton releases a limited subset of DOC compounds, which are molecularly diversified during subsequent microbial degradation31,32,49.
Uptake and release matrix (U, R)
The default uptake matrix U = (Uij) is a binary matrix, where Uij = 1 encodes that the DOC compound unit j is taken up by microbial unit i according to the maximum uptake rate; Uij = 0 means that the DOC compound unit j is not taken up by microbial unit i. The matrix is randomly constructed in each model simulation with the following restrictions: i) all microbial units can take up the same number of substrates nU, i.e. the sum over the rows is identical, ii) all DOC compound units are associated with a decomposer, i.e. each column has at least one entry Uij = 1, and iii) there is no DOC compound unit which is consumed by all microbial units, i.e. each column has at least one entry Uij = 0. The sum over the columns, is on average (m × nU)/n = 1.05, however it differs slightly due to the random variations among the columns (standard variation of 0.23), thus each DOC compound unit has a slightly different total uptake rate.
The default release matrix R = (Rij) defines the partitioning of carbon among the release products, where Rij = 0.3 means that the microbial unit i releases 30% of released carbon in the form of compound unit j. A fixed number of release products (nR) per microbial unit is distributed randomly across the compound units. However, it is ensured that microbes do not release compound units they take up (i.e. Rij = 0, if Uij = 1). The row sums of the release matrix are equal to one, to preserve the mass balance of carbon. The sum over the columns differs due to random variations, thus each DOC compound unit has a slightly different total release rate (on average m/n = 0.35, with a standard deviation of 0.09).
The network of uptake and release abilities is constructed randomly. However, we show that the stochastic influence of the network on the long-term DOC concentration is low compared to the influence of the model parameters (see light green area in Fig. 3, indicating the variation between 50 randomly constructed networks). Similarly, Coles and colleagues55 found indications that biogeochemical gradients of DOC are determined by the total available pool of metabolic functions, rather than by the distribution of functions among organisms.
Energy turnover of microbes
To test the implications of the model parameterization on the assumed energy turnover of microbes, we calculated the energy gain from the complete oxidation of the DOC constituents for the individual microbial cells. The energy turnover of microbes is estimated assuming that the respiration in equilibrium matches the supply of DOC. According to LaRowe et al.56, the standard molal Gibbs energy in the model is 0.0054 kJ/m3/d, assuming the default supply rate (s = 8 × 10−2 mmolC/m3/d) and a mean nominal oxidation state of carbon of −0.2685 (based on 164 Atlantic DOM samples presented in Mentges et al.57). For a mean cell number in the bathypelagic of 6 × 1010 (0.12 mmolC/m3 35 at 25 fgC/cell58), the energy turned over is 3.31 × 10−11 kJ/cell/year. This is orders of magnitude higher than the basal power requirements of microheterotrophs, estimated for oxic and anoxic sediments (3.31 × 10−14 kJ/cell/year and 10−15 to 10−14 kJ/cell/year59). Thus, in principle, microbial life in the deep sea can be sustained from the oxidation of DOC in a situation of dynamic steady-state7.
Simulating differential equations
The differential equations were solved numerically in MATLAB (Version 2017b, The MathWorks, Inc., Natick, Massachusetts, United States), using the non-stiff differential equation solver ode45, with the following options: maximum time step was 50 d, all state variables were set to be non-negative, and the relative error tolerance was set to 10−6. To prevent microbial biomass from dropping to the smallest positive normalized floating-point number in MATLAB (1 × 10−308) if no DOC is supplied, we added a constant influx of microbes at rate of 1 × 10−300 mmolC/m3/d. This corresponds to an inflow of roughly one microbial cell per day to a volume of 1 × 10288 m3 (carbon content of a single microbial cell ~2 × 10−12 mmolC58). As the volume of the ocean is about 1 × 1018 m3, this inflow of carbon is considered negligible relative to the state variables.
Simulations
All simulations were initiated with a total biomass of 1 mmolC/m3 for the microbial community, representative for values typically observed in the surface ocean35. At 25 fgC/cell58, 1 mmolC/m3 of microbial biomass in the model translates to ~5 × 1011 cells.
Formation of a recalcitrant DOC pool
The amount of (apparently) recalcitrant DOC was determined for three different supply-scenarios (Fig. 2): high supply rates of DOC (default eutrophic supply s = 8 × 10−2 mmolC/m3/d), low supply rates of DOC (s = 8 × 10−3 mmolC/m3/d), and no supply of DOC (s = 0). The simulation was initiated with equal amounts of all DOC compound units and microbial units (in total 80 mmolC/m3 DOC, representing high surface-ocean values34). The flux to the inorganic carbon pool in the high, low, and no supply scenarios was ~1, 3, and 30 mmolC/m3 per year on average.
Size of the DOC reservoir: A sensitivity analysis
The steady-state DOC concentration was determined over a range of parameter values, based on 50 independent runs per parameter value (Fig. 3). Each parameter was varied individually, while the other parameters were kept at their default value. The parameters were varied between 50–150% of their default value. Note that the number of microbial units m could not be decreased by 50% without violating our basic assumption that every compound unit should be associated with a consuming microbial unit: at a default of 3 substrates per microbial unit and 100 compound units, at least 34 microbial units are required to maintain this basic assumption. Similarly, the number of compound units n could not be increased by 50%, and the number of substrates per microbe nU could not be decreased by 50%.
Millennial scale stability of DOC
The age of DOC compound units was simulated in a Lagrangian water parcel moving along the oceanic circulation (Fig. 4, for derivation of age see supplement). The water parcel was assumed to stay in near-surface layers for one year, subsequently sink to deeper waters, remain in the deep sea for 899 years (i.e. average circulation age of water in the Pacific60), and finally rise back to the surface. The radiocarbon age is derived based on equations 4 through 12 in the supplement. The supply rate of DOC was variable over time to reflect the respective environmental conditions: high supply rates near the surface (default supply rate) and low supply rates of DOC in the deep sea from sinking particulate organic matter (one permil of the surface supply rate, as the global production of high molecular weight DOM in the deep ocean is estimated at 0.014 PgC/y5), which is ≈ 10−3 × 25 PgC/y surface labile DOC production4). The supply was linearly adapted to the new conditions after sinking/rising of the water parcel over a transition period of 10 days. To reflect the effect of an algal bloom, the supply of DOC was selectively distributed among the compounds, i.e. the total supply rate was split among a small, fixed subset of compound units. Note that we exclusively varied the DOC supply rate, whereas supply diversity was fixed throughout the simulation. The supply diversity was assumed at 3%, (see Supplement Fig. S11C for a sensitivity analysis of mean DOC age to this parameter). This setup reflects the observation that phytoplankton preferentially releases a limited subset of DOM compounds, which are molecularly diversified during subsequent microbial degradation31,32,49. To quantify the degree to which a DOC compound unit is supplied versus microbially produced, we derived a measure of the “distance to supply” for each compound unit (Fig. 5D,E, note that the term distance is not used in sense used in the context of networks, i.e. number of edges between two points, but rather depicts a proportion). It was calculated based on the total fraction of carbon released by consumers of supplied compounds. This measure was inverted and rescaled, such that 0 indicates that a compound is directly supplied e.g. from algae, whereas 1 indicates that the compound is exclusively microbially produced.
References
Hansell, D. A., Carlson, C. A., Repeta, D. J. & Schlitzer, R. Dissolved organic matter in the ocean. Oceanography 22, 202–211 (2009).
Carlson, C. A. & Hansell, D. A. DOM Sources, Sinks, Reactivity, and Budgets. In Biogeochemistry of Marine Dissolved Organic Matter (eds. Hansell, D. A. & Carlson, C. A.) 65–126, https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-405940-5.00003-0 (Elsevier, 2015).
Zigah, P. K. et al. Allochthonous sources and dynamic cycling of ocean dissolved organic carbon revealed by carbon isotopes. Geophys. Res. Lett. 44, 2407–2415 (2017).
Hansell, D. A. Recalcitrant Dissolved Organic Carbon Fractions. Ann. Rev. Mar. Sci. 5, 421–445 (2013).
Walker, B. D., Beaupré, S. R., Guilderson, T. P., McCarthy, M. D. & Druffel, E. R. M. Pacific carbon cycling constrained by organic matter size, age and composition relationships. Nat. Geosci. 9, 888–891 (2016).
Khatiwala, S., Primeau, F. & Holzer, M. Ventilation of the deep ocean constrained with tracer observations and implications for radiocarbon estimates of ideal mean age. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 325–326, 116–125 (2012).
Follett, C. L., Repeta, D. J., Rothman, D. H., Xu, L. & Santinelli, C. Hidden cycle of dissolved organic carbon in the deep ocean. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 111, 16706–16711 (2014).
Dittmar, T. Reasons Behind the Long-Term Stability of Dissolved Organic Matter. In Biogeochemistry of Marine Dissolved Organic Matter (eds. Hansell, D. A. & Carlson, C. A.) 369–388, https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-405940-5.00007-8 (Elsevier Inc., 2015).
Jannasch, H. W. Growth of marine bacteria at limiting concentrations of organic carbon in seawater. Limnol. Oceanogr. 12, 264–271 (1967).
Arrieta, J. M. et al. Dilution limits dissolved organic carbon utilization in the deep ocean. Science 348, 331–333 (2015).
Traving, S. J., Thygesen, U. H., Riemann, L. & Stedmon, C. A. A model of extracellular enzymes in free-living microbes: Which strategy pays off? Appl. Environ. Microbiol. 81, 7385–7393 (2015).
Jiao, N. et al. Comment on: Dilution Limits Dissolved Organic Carbon Utilization in the Deep Ocean. Science 350, 1483a (2015).
Landry, Z., Swan, B. K., Herndl, G. J., Stepanauskas, R. & Giovannoni, S. J. SAR202 Genomes from the Dark Ocean Predict Pathways for the Oxidation of Recalcitrant Dissolved Organic Matter. MBio 8, 1–19 (2017).
Wilson, J. D. & Arndt, S. Modeling radiocarbon constraints on the dilution of dissolved organic carbon in the deep ocean. Global Biogeochem. Cycles 31, 1–12 (2017).
Zhang, C. et al. Evolving paradigms in biological carbon cycling in the ocean. Natl. Sci. Rev. 5, 481–499 (2018).
Shen, Y. & Benner, R. Mixing it up in the ocean carbon cycle and the removal of refractory dissolved organic carbon. Sci. Rep. 8, 1–9 (2018).
Dittmar, T. & Arnosti, C. An inseparable liason: Marine microbes and nonliving organic matter. In Microbial ecology of the oceans (eds. Gasol, J. M. & Kirchman, D. L.) 189–218 (Wiley-Blackwell, 2018).
Jiao, N. et al. Mechanisms of microbial carbon sequestration in the ocean – future research directions. Biogeosciences 11, 5285–5306 (2014).
Luo, Y. W., Friedrichs, M. A. M., Doney, S. C., Church, M. J. & Ducklow, H. W. Oceanic heterotrophic bacterial nutrition by semilabile DOM as revealed by data assimilative modeling. Aquat. Microb. Ecol. 60, 273–287 (2010).
Keller, D. P. & Hood, R. R. Modeling the seasonal autochthonous sources of dissolved organic carbon and nitrogen in the upper Chesapeake Bay. Ecol. Modell. 222, 1139–1162 (2011).
Hasumi, H. & Nagata, T. Modeling the global cycle of marine dissolved organic matter and its influence on marine productivity. Ecol. Modell. 288, 9–24 (2014).
Wang, N. et al. Contribution of structural recalcitrance to the formation of the deep oceanic dissolved organic carbon reservoir. Environ. Microbiol. Rep. 10, 711–717 (2018).
Polimene, L., Allen, J. & Zavatarelli, M. Model of interactions between dissolved organic carbon and bacteria in marine systems. Aquat. Microb. Ecol. 43, 127–138 (2006).
Polimene, L. et al. Special Topic: Marine Carbon Sequestration and Climate Change Geosciences Modelling marine DOC degradation time scales. 44, 468–474 (2018).
Lu, W., Luo, Y., Yan, X. & Jiang, Y. Modeling the contribution of the microbial carbon pump to carbon sequestration in the South China Sea. Sci. China Earth Sci. 1–11, https://doi.org/10.1007/s11430-017-9180-y (2018).
Letscher, R. T., Moore, J. K., Teng, Y. C. & Primeau, F. Variable C: N: P stoichiometry of dissolved organic matter cycling in the Community Earth System Model. Biogeosciences 12, 209–221 (2015).
Grégoire, M., Raick, C. & Soetaert, K. Numerical modeling of the central Black Sea ecosystem functioning during the eutrophication phase. Prog. Oceanogr. 76, 286–333 (2008).
Preston, C. M. & Schmidt, M. W. I. Black (pyrogenic) carbon: a synthesis of current knowledge and uncertainties with special consideration of boreal regions. Biogeosciences 3, 397–420 (2006).
Dittmar, T. & Paeng, J. A heat-induced molecular signature in marine dissolved organic matter. Nat. Geosci. 2, 175–179 (2009).
Ogawa, H., Amagai, Y., Koike, I., Kaiser, K. & Benner, R. Production of Refractory Dissolved Organic Matter by Bacteria. Science 292, 917–920 (2001).
Lechtenfeld, O. J., Hertkorn, N., Shen, Y., Witt, M. & Benner, R. Marine sequestration of carbon in bacterial metabolites. Nat. Commun. 6, 6711 (2015).
Koch, B. P., Kattner, G., Witt, M. & Passow, U. Molecular insights into the microbial formation of marine dissolved organic matter: Recalcitrant or labile? Biogeosciences 11, 4173–4190 (2014).
Logue, J. B. et al. Experimental insights into the importance of aquatic bacterial community composition to the degradation of dissolved organic matter. ISME J. 10, 533–545 (2015).
Roshan, S. & DeVries, T. Efficient dissolved organic carbon production and export in the oligotrophic ocean. Nat. Commun. 8, 2036 (2017).
Arístegui, J., Gasol, J. M., Duarte, C. M. & Herndl, G. J. Microbial oceanography of the dark ocean’s pelagic realm. Limnol. Oceanogr. 54, 1501–1529 (2009).
Romera-Castillo, C., Letscher, R. T. & Hansell, D. A. New nutrients exert fundamental control on dissolved organic carbon accumulation in the surface Atlantic Ocean. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 113, 10497–10502 (2016).
Hein, M. & Sand-Jensen, K. CO2 increases oceanic primary production. Nature 388, 526–527 (1997).
Bellerby, R. G. J. et al. Marine ecosystem community carbon and nutrient uptake stoichiometry under varying ocean acidification during the PeECE III experiment. Biogeosciences 5, 1517–1527 (2008).
Zark, M., Riebesell, U. & Dittmar, T. Effects of ocean acidification on marine dissolved organic matter are not detectable over the succession of phytoplankton blooms. Sci. Adv. 1, e1500531 (2015).
Tilman, D. Resource competition and plant traits: A response to Craine et al. 2005. J. Ecol. 95, 231–234 (2007).
Jiao, N. et al. Microbial production of recalcitrant dissolved organic matter: long-term carbon storage in the global ocean. Nat. Rev. Microbiol. 8, 593–599 (2010).
Walker, B. D. et al. Linked changes in marine dissolved organic carbon molecular size and radiocarbon age. Geophys. Res. Lett. 43, 385–393 (2016).
Benner, R. & Amon, R. M. W. The Size-Reactivity Continuum of Major Bioelements in the Ocean. Ann. Rev. Mar. Sci. 7, 185–205 (2015).
Rossel, P. E. et al. Thermally altered marine dissolved organic matter in hydrothermal fluids. Org. Geochem. 110, 73–86 (2017).
Cherrier, J., Bauer, J. E., Druffel, E. R. M. M., Coffin, R. B. & Chanton, J. P. Radiocarbon in marine bacteria: Evidence for the ages of assimilated carbon. Limnol. Oceanogr. 44, 730–736 (1999).
Teeling, H. et al. Substrate-Controlled Succession of Marine Bacterioplankton Populations Induced by a Phytoplankton Bloom. Science 336, 608–611 (2012).
Huber, J. A. et al. Microbial population structures in the deep marine biosphere. Science 318, 97–100 (2007).
Zark, M., Christoffers, J. & Dittmar, T. Molecular properties of deep-sea dissolved organic matter are predictable by the central limit theorem: Evidence from tandem FT-ICR-MS. Mar. Chem. 191, 9–15 (2017).
Osterholz, H., Niggemann, J., Giebel, H. A., Simon, M. & Dittmar, T. Inefficient microbial production of refractory dissolved organic matter in the ocean. Nat. Commun. 6 (2015).
del Giorgio, P. A. & Cole, J. J. Bacterial Growth Efficiency in Natural Aquatic Systems. Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 29, 503–541 (1998).
Tamburini, C., Garcin, J. & Bianchi, A. Role of deep-sea bacteria in organic matter mineralization and adaptation to hydrostatic pressure conditions in the NW Mediterranean Sea. Aquat. Microb. Ecol. 32, 209–218 (2003).
Schut, F. et al. Substrate uptake and utilization by a marine ultramicrobacterium. Microbiology 141, 351–361 (1995).
Pace, M. L. Bacterial mortality and the fate of bacterial production. Hydrobiologia 159, 41–49 (1988).
Eakins, B. W. & Sharman, G. F. Volumes of the World’s Oceans from ETOPO1. Data set. (2010).
Coles, V. J. et al. Ocean biogeochemistry modeled with emergent trait-based genomics. Science 358, 1149–1154 (2017).
LaRowe, D. E. & Van Cappellen, P. Degradation of natural organic matter: A thermodynamic analysis. Geochim. Cosmochim. Acta 75, 2030–2042 (2011).
Mentges, A., Feenders, C., Seibt, M., Blasius, B. & Dittmar, T. Functional Molecular Diversity of Marine Dissolved Organic Matter Is Reduced during Degradation. Front. Mar. Sci. 4, 1–10 (2017).
Trousellier, M., Bouvy, M., Courties, C. & Dupuy, C. Variation of carbon content among bacterial species under starvation condition. Aquat. Microb. Ecol. 13, 113–119 (1997).
Lever, M. A. et al. Life under extreme energy limitation: a synthesis of laboratory- and field-based investigations. FEMS Microbiol. Rev. 39, 688–728 (2015).
Matsumoto, K. Radiocarbon-based circulation age of the world oceans. J. Geophys. Res. Ocean. 112, 1–7 (2007).
Acknowledgements
We thank Helmut Hillebrand for his valuable comments on the manuscript. We thankfully acknowledge funding by the ministry of science and culture of Lower Saxony (Niedersächsisches Ministerium für Wissenschaft und Kultur, MWK) within the research training program IBR (Interdisciplinary approach to functional biodiversity research) and a postgraduate scholarship from the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD).
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
T.D. and C.D. conceived the study. A.M. and C.F. implemented the model and prepared the manuscript. T.D., C.D., A.M., C.F., and B.B. revised the manuscript critically.
Corresponding authors
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing interests.
Additional information
Publisher’s note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
About this article
Cite this article
Mentges, A., Feenders, C., Deutsch, C. et al. Long-term stability of marine dissolved organic carbon emerges from a neutral network of compounds and microbes. Sci Rep 9, 17780 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-54290-z
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-54290-z
This article is cited by
-
The microbial carbon pump and climate change
Nature Reviews Microbiology (2024)
-
Functional convergence in slow-growing microbial communities arises from thermodynamic constraints
The ISME Journal (2023)
-
Enigmatic persistence of dissolved organic matter in the ocean
Nature Reviews Earth & Environment (2021)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.