Executive Editor Comment on "The SUPECA kinetics for scaling redox reactions in networks of mixed substrates and consumers and an example application to aerobic soil respiration"

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Astrid Kerkweg
2017 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 3277-3295 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin-Yun Tang ◽  
William J. Riley

Abstract. Several land biogeochemical models used for studying carbon–climate feedbacks have begun explicitly representing microbial dynamics. However, to our knowledge, there has been no theoretical work on how to achieve a consistent scaling of the complex biogeochemical reactions from microbial individuals to populations, communities, and interactions with plants and mineral soils. We focus here on developing a mathematical formulation of the substrate–consumer relationships for consumer-mediated redox reactions of the form A + BE→  products, where products could be, e.g., microbial biomass or bioproducts. Under the quasi-steady-state approximation, these substrate–consumer relationships can be formulated as the computationally difficult full equilibrium chemistry problem or approximated analytically with the dual Monod (DM) or synthesizing unit (SU) kinetics. We find that DM kinetics is scaling inconsistently for reaction networks because (1) substrate limitations are not considered, (2) contradictory assumptions are made regarding the substrate processing rate when transitioning from single- to multi-substrate redox reactions, and (3) the product generation rate cannot be scaled from one to multiple substrates. In contrast, SU kinetics consistently scales the product generation rate from one to multiple substrates but predicts unrealistic results as consumer abundances reach large values with respect to their substrates. We attribute this deficit to SU's failure to incorporate substrate limitation in its derivation. To address these issues, we propose SUPECA (SU plus the equilibrium chemistry approximation – ECA) kinetics, which consistently imposes substrate and consumer mass balance constraints. We show that SUPECA kinetics satisfies the partition principle, i.e., scaling invariance across a network of an arbitrary number of reactions (e.g., as in Newton's law of motion and Dalton's law of partial pressures). We tested SUPECA kinetics with the equilibrium chemistry solution for some simple problems and found SUPECA outperformed SU kinetics. As an example application, we show that a steady-state SUPECA-based approach predicted an aerobic soil respiration moisture response function that agreed well with laboratory observations. We conclude that, as an extension to SU and ECA kinetics, SUPECA provides a robust mathematical representation of complex soil substrate–consumer interactions and can be applied to improve Earth system model (ESM) land models.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinyun Tang ◽  
William J. Riley

Abstract. Several land biogeochemical models used for studying carbon-climate feedbacks have begun explicitly representing microbial processes. However, to our knowledge, there has been no theoretical work on how to achieve a consistent scaling of the complex biogeochemical reactions from microbial individuals to populations, communities, and interactions with plants and mineral soils. We here study this scaling problem by focusing on the substrate-consumer relationships for consumer mediated redox reactions of the form A + B     E → products, where products could be microbial biomass and different bio-products. Under the quasi-steady-state approximation, these substrate-consumer relationships can be formulated as the computationally difficult full Equilibrium Chemistry problem, which is then usually approximated analytically with the popular Dual Monod (DM) kinetics and Synthesizing Unit (SU) kinetics. However, we found that the DM kinetics is scaling inconsistent for reaction networks because it (1) does not incorporate substrate limitation in its derivation, (2) invokes contradictory assumptions regarding the substrate processing rate when transitioning from single substrate reactions to two-substrate redox reactions, and (3) cannot scale the product generation rate from one to multiple substrates. In contrast, the SU kinetics can consistently scale the product generation rate from one to multiple substrates, but suffers from the deficit that as the consumer abundance approaches infinity, it predicts singular infinite reaction rates even for limited substrates. We attribute this deficit to SU’s failure to incorporate the substrate limitation in its derivation and remedy SU with the proposed SUPECA (SU Plus Equilibrium Chemistry Approximation) kinetics, which consistently imposes the mass balance constraints from both substrates and consumers on consumer-substrate interactions in calculating redox reaction rates. Moreover, we show the SUPECA kinetics satisfies the partition principle as in theories like Newton's Law of motion and Dalton’s law of partial pressures, such that its mathematical manifestation is scaling invariant when transitioning from an individual reaction to a network of many reactions. We benchmarked the SUPECA kinetics with the equilibrium chemistry solution for some simple problem configurations and found SUPECA outperformed the SU kinetics. In applying the SUPECA kinetics to aerobic soil respiration, we found SUPECA predicted consistent but variable moisture response functions that agreed well to those derived from incubation data. We finally discuss how the SUPECA kinetics could help Earth System Models consistently incorporate more biogeochemical reactions to improve their biogeochemical modules.


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