Quantifying the degradation of organic matter in marine sediments: A review and synthesis
Publication date
2013
Authors
Arndt, S.
Jørgensen, B.B.
LaRowe, D.E.
Middelburg, J.J.
Pancost, R.D.
Regnier, P.
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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(c) UU Universiteit Utrecht, 2013
Abstract
Quantifying the rates of biogeochemical processes in marine sediments is essential for understanding global
element cycles and climate change. Because organic matter degradation is the engine behind benthic dynamics,
deciphering the impact that various forces have on this process is central to determining the evolution of
the Earth system. Therefore, recent developments in the quantitative modeling of organic matter degradation
in marine sediments are critically reviewed. The first part of the review synthesizes the main chemical, biological
and physical factors that control organic matter degradation in sediments while the second part provides
a general review of the mathematical formulations used to model these processes and the third part
evaluates their application over different spatial and temporal scales. Key transport mechanisms in sedimentary
environments are summarized and the mathematical formulation of the organic matter degradation rate
law is described in detail. The roles of enzyme kinetics, bioenergetics, temperature and biomass growth in
particular are highlighted. Alternative model approaches that quantify the degradation rate constant are
also critically compared. In the third part of the review, the capability of different model approaches to extrapolate
organic matter degradation rates over a broad range of temporal and spatial scales is assessed. In
addition, the structure, functions and parameterization of more than 250 published models of organic matter
degradation in marine sediments are analyzed. The large range of published model parameters illustrates the
complex nature of organic matter dynamics, and, thus, the limited transferability of these parameters from
one site to another. Compiled model parameters do not reveal a statistically significant correlation with single
environmental characteristics such as water depth, deposition rate or organic matter flux. The lack of a
generic framework that allows for model parameters to be constrained in data-poor areas seriously limits
the quantification of organic matter degradation on a global scale. Therefore, we explore regional patterns
that emerge from the compiled more than 250 organic matter rate constants and critically discuss them in
their environmental context. This review provides an interdisciplinary view on organic matter degradation
in marine sediments. It contributes to an improved understanding of global patterns in benthic organic matter
degradation, and helps identify outstanding questions and future directions in the modeling of organic
matter degradation in marine sediments.
Keywords
Organic matter degradation, Marine sediments, Reaction–transport modeling, Diagenesis