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Technical CommentsComment on "Physical Model for the Decay and Preservation of Marine Organic Carbon"Rothman and Forney (Reports, 1 June 2007, p. 1325) described a model for the decay of marine organic carbon. However, the enzyme deactivation rates required by their model are too fast compared with available data, and the model fails to explain the similarity in observed decay rate constants from different experiments. Alternative models provide equally good fit to the observed temporal trend in decay rate constants.
1 Department of Oceanography, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4J1, Canada. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bernie.boudreau{at}dal.ca Rothman and Forney (1) investigated the degradation and preservation of marine organic carbon, and their study contains interesting ideas that may help improve the understanding of this environmentally and geologically important topic. However, we disagree with several aspects of their proposed model.
First, Rothman and Forney argue that the decomposition rate of organic matter in sediments is controlled by the rate of diffusion of extracellular enzymes from the secreting bacteria. Diffusion becomes rate limiting because the authors hypothesize that the enzymes are rapidly deactivated, with a rate constant Second, according to the Rothman and Forney model, the rate constant k for organic matter decay should depend on the sediment geometry, the amount of mixing (if any), and the presence or absence of sediment, because enzyme diffusion and the deactivation mechanism depend on these factors. Thus, experiments that radically differ in these factors should produce substantially different k values. Yet counter examples are easily identified. For example, in an experiment on anoxic decay of fresh organic matter (plankton) in a mixed vessel with no sediment, Harvey et al. (8) found that k has a range of 0.0068 to 0.0080 d–1. Conversely, Westrich and Berner (9) conducted an anoxic organic matter decay experiment by adding fresh plankton to anoxic sediment and measuring the rate of sulfide formation. Their data can be modeled with an intrinsic-reactivity model (see supporting online text, Part A) to obtain a rate constant of 0.0092 d–1, which is similar to the Harvey et al. (8) values. This correspondence of rates should not occur if the Rothman and Forney model is correct.
Third, Rothman and Forney claim that their model is supported by the fact that it closely predicts the change in the apparent (mean) rate constant for organic matter decay,
is a measure of the distribution of intrinsic reactive types. Taking the values of the parameters and a in Eq. 1 from a single experiment in (9) that lasted two years, that is, = 0.125 and a = 0.0003 years (11), the continuum version of the intrinsic-reactivity model generates the relation = 0.125 (0.0003 + t)–1. This function is plotted in Fig. 1 as the solid red line. For comparison, the Rothman and Forney derived equation for is plotted as the dashed blue line, and Middelburg's best-fit power law is included as the dotted green line. The prediction from the continuum version of the intrinsic-reactivity model is certainly as accurate as the Rothman and Forney model prediction, within the uncertainty of these data, over a span of eight orders of magnitude in both and t. Thus, we contend that Rothman and Forney cannot claim any superiority based on consistency with the data in Fig. 1. Furthermore, Eq. 1 is arguably conceptually preferable because it suffers no singularity at t =0.
Because of these problems, we believe that the model proposed in (1) is not consistent with current knowledge about sedimentary organic decomposition and is thus incorrect. Intrinsic reactivity, as modified by likely clay-organic matter interactions, is in our opinion a much more viable model of this process.
Supporting Online Material www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/319/5870/1616b/DC1 SOM Text Figs. S1 and S2 References
Received for publication 31 July 2007. Accepted for publication 25 February 2008.
The editors suggest the following Related Resources on Science sites:In Science Magazine
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Science. ISSN 0036-8075 (print), 1095-9203 (online)