Oxygen isotope ratios (18O/16O) of hemicellulose-derived sugar biomarkers in plants, soils and sediments as paleoclimate proxy I: Insight from a climate chamber experiment

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Michael Zech - , Heisenberg Chair of Physical Geography with a Focus on Paleoenvironmental Research, University of Bayreuth, Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (Author)
  • Christoph Mayr - , Friedrich-Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (Author)
  • Mario Tuthorn - , University of Bayreuth (Author)
  • Katharina Leiber-Sauheitl - , Johann Heinrich von Thunen Institute (Author)
  • Bruno Glaser - , Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg (Author)

Abstract

The oxygen isotopic composition of cellulose is a valuable proxy in paleoclimate research. However, its application to sedimentary archives is challenging due to extraction and purification of cellulose. Here we present compound-specific δ18O results of hemicellulose-derived sugar biomarkers determined using gas chromatography-pyrolysis-isotope ratio mass spectrometry, which is a method that overcomes the above-mentioned analytical challenges. The biomarkers were extracted from stem material of different plants (Eucalyptus globulus, Vicia faba and Brassica oleracea) grown in climate chamber experiments under different climatic conditions. The δ18O values of arabinose and xylose range from 31.4‰ to 45.9‰ and from 28.7‰ to 40.8‰, respectively, and correlate highly significantly with each other (R=0.91, p<0.001). Furthermore, δ18Ohemicellulose (mean of arabinose and xylose) correlate highly significantly with δ18Oleaf water (R=0.66, p<0.001) and significantly with modeled δ18Ocellulose (R=0.42, p<0.038), as well as with relative air humidity (R=-0.79, p<0.001) and temperature (R=-0.66, p<0.001). These findings confirm that the hemicellulose-derived sugar biomarkers, like cellulose, reflect the oxygen isotopic composition of plant source water altered by climatically controlled evapotranspirative 18O enrichment of leaf water. While relative air humidity controls most rigorously the evapotranspirative 18O enrichment, the direct temperature effect is less important. However, temperature can indirectly exert influence via plant physiological reactions, namely by influencing the transpiration rate which affects δ18Oleaf water due to the Péclet effect. In a companion paper (Tuthorn et al., this issue) we demonstrate the applicability of the hemicellulose-derived sugar biomarker δ18O method to soils and provide evidence from a climate transect study confirming that relative air humidity exerts the dominant control on evapotranspirative 18O enrichment of leaf water.Finally, we present a conceptual model for the interpretation of δ18Ohemicellulose records and propose that a combined δ18Ohemicellulose and δ2Hn-alkane biomarker approach is promising for disentangling δ18Oprecipitation variability from evapotranspirative 18O enrichment variability in future paleoclimate studies.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)614-623
Number of pages10
JournalGeochimica et cosmochimica acta
Volume126
Publication statusPublished - 1 Feb 2014
Peer-reviewedYes

Keywords

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