Chemistry and microbiology of the Critical Zone along a steep climate and vegetation gradient in the Chilean Coastal Cordillera
Date Issued
2018
Author(s)
Oeser, Ralf A.
Stroncik, Nicole
Moskwa, Lisa-Marie
Bernhard, Nadine
Schaller, Mirjam
Canessa, Rafaella
van den Brink, Liesbeth
Koester, Moritz
Brucker, Emanuel
Stock, Svenja
Pablo Fuentes, Juan
Godoy, Roberto
Javier Matus, Francisco
Oses Pedraza, Romulo
Osses McIntyre, Pablo
Paulino, Leandro
Seguel, Oscar
Bader, Maaike Y.
Boy, Jens
Dippold, Michaela A.
Ehlers, Todd A.
Kuehn, Peter
Kuzyakov, Yakov
Leinweber, Peter
Scholten, Thomas
Spielvogel, Sandra
Spohn, Marie
Ubernickel, Kirstin
Tielboerger, Katja
Wagner, Dirk
von Blanckenburg, Friedhelm
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2018.06.002
Abstract
The Chilean Coastal Cordillera features a spectacular climate and vegetation gradient, ranging from arid and unvegetated areas in the north to humid and forested areas in the south. The EarthShape project (Earth Surface Shaping by Biota) uses this natural gradient to investigate how climate and biological processes shape the Earth's surface. We explored the Critical Zone, the Earth's uppermost layer, in four key sites located in desert, semidesert, Mediterranean, and temperate climate zones of the Coastal Cordillera, with the focus on weathering of granitic rock. Here, we present first results from 16 approximately 2 m-deep regolith profiles to document: (1) architecture of weathering zone; (2) degree and rate of rock weathering, thus the release of mineral-derived nutrients to the terrestrial ecosystems; (3) denudation rates; and (4) microbial abundances of bacteria and archaea in the saprolite. From north to south, denudation rates from cosmogenic nuclides are similar to 10 t km(-2) yr(-1) at the arid Pan de Aziicar site, similar to 20 t km(2) yr(-1) at the semi-arid site of Santa Gracia, -60 t km(-2) yr(-1) at the Mediterranean climate site of La Campana, and similar to 30 t km(-2) yr(-1) at the humid site of Nahuelbuta. A and B horizons increase in thickness and elemental depletion or enrichment increases from north (similar to 26 degrees S) to south (similar to 38 degrees S) in these horizons. Differences in the degree of chemical weathering, quantified by the chemical depletion fraction (CDF), are significant only between the arid and sparsely vegetated site and the other three sites. Differences in the CDF between the sites, and elemental depletion within the sites are sometimes smaller than the variations induced by the bedrock heterogeneity. Microbial abundances (bacteria and archaea) in saprolite substantially increase from the arid to the semi-arid sites. With this study, we provide a comprehensive dataset characterizing the Critical Zone geochemistry in the Chilean Coastal Cordillera. This dataset confirms climatic controls on weathering and denudation rates and provides prerequisites to quantify the role of biota in future studies.


