Abstract

[1] Metabolic activity in stream corridors is regulated by a complex combination of factors that are difficult to disentangle in mature ecosystems. Chicken Creek in Germany, an experimentally created watershed in an early successional stage, offers the opportunity to assess the spatiotemporal variation in metabolic activity in a simplified system. We measured microbial respiration in soils and sediments along the hydrologic flow path from upland terrestrial to ephemeral to perennial sites of three stream corridors. Dry soils and sediments were rewetted before respiration measurements to mimic periods of activity during and after rainfall. Respiration rates and organic matter contents of soil and sediment were generally low. The presence of algae and accretion of vascular plant fragments in the perennial stream reaches increased respiration rates, pointing to the importance of particulate organic matter. Contrary to expectation, respiration rates of rewetted soil and sediment from dry stream channels were similar to rates measured with sediments collected in the perennial channel sections. This suggests that permanent water availability was not a main factor determining metabolic potential in the early successional Chicken Creek watershed. Carbon turnover in perennial channels was fourfold to eightfold higher than in ephemeral channels and terrestrial sites, as water was permanently available. However, this magnitude was insufficient for perennial channels to compensate for the large surface area of terrestrial soils: extrapolated to a year and the whole watershed, stream channels contributed only 5% to total carbon turnover, 95% being due to soils during and after rainfall events.

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