Abstract

The soil redox potential in wetlands such as peatlands or salt marshes exerts a strong control over microbial decomposition processes and consequently soil carbon cycling. Wetland plants can influence redox by supplying both terminal electron acceptors (i.e. oxygen) and electron donors (i.e. organic matter) to the soil system. However, quantitative insight into the importance of plant effects on wetland soil redox and associated plant traits are scarce. In a combined mesocosm and field study we investigated the impact of plants on soil reduction using IRIS (Indicator of Reduction in Soils) sticks. Vegetated plots were compared to non-vegetated plots along an elevational gradient in a salt marsh of the Wadden Sea and along an artificially created gradient in a tidal tank mesocosm experiment. Our findings from the mesocosm experiment demonstrated that vegetation both enhanced and suppressed soil reduction relative to non-vegetated control pots. The direction of the plant effect (i.e., net oxidizing or net reducing) was inversely correlated with background redox conditions. Insights from high-resolution oxygen profiling via planar optode imaging corroborated these findings. In the field study, vegetation consistently reduced the comparatively well-aerated Wadden Sea salt marsh soil. Reduction correlated positively with soil organic matter content and belowground biomass, indicating that greater availability of plant-derived electron donors, in the form of organic matter, increased soil reduction. Challenging the dominant paradigm that wetland plants primarily act as soil oxidizers, our study reveals their potential to exert a net reducing effect. The documented impact of these plant-induced changes in soil redox conditions suggests a previously overlooked role in shaping the stability of soil organic carbon stocks in wetland ecosystems with variable water tables.

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