Abstract
The rates of microbial processes in the sor solonchaks and the silts of the Western Transbaikalean saline lakes were investigated. The rate of deep CO2 fixation in the silt of Lake Beloe was as high as 0.19 mg C dm−3 day−1. The content of cellulose and protein in the sor solonchaks (for air-dry material) were up to 5.0 and 0.42 mg g−1, respectively. The rates of cellulose decomposition and proteolysis in the silt were 1.08 and 0.96 % day−1, respectively. Sulfate reduction (up to 1.82 mg S dm−3 day−1) prevails at the terminal stages of anaerobic decomposition of organic matter in the silt. During the flooding period, methanogenesis producing isotopically light CH4 probably prevails in the sor solonchaks and arid soils of the region. This suggestion is supported by the surface foaming of the local arid soils after abundant monsoon rains, an increase in the δ13C value for soil carbonates to -5.94‰ along the solonchak profile, and a decrease in the ·13C value for the soil carbonates formed by methane-oxidizing bacteria to −11.41‰. The seasonal peaks of isotopically heavier (to −16.60‰) organic matter in the bottom sediments of the lake may be explained as the result of activity of heterotrophic sulfate reducers, which exhibited the highest growth rates at the peak sulfate concentrations in the silt.
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