Project Details
Projekt Print View

SPP 1315:  Biogeochemical Interfaces in Soil

Subject Area Agriculture, Forestry and Veterinary Medicine
Term from 2007 to 2018
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 31907460
 
Soil is an enlivened, heterogeneous three-phase system made of solid, liquid and gaseous components. It serves as a dynamic interface between the biosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere and lithosphere and is thus the essential compartment of the "critical zone". Research within the Priority Programme aims at the systematic structural characterisation and functional exploration of biogeochemical interfaces in soil and at unravelling their role for fate and effect of organic chemicals. The overall connecting scientific goal is to gain a mechanistic understanding of the complex interplay and interdependencies of physical, chemical and biological processes operative at biogeochemical interfaces. Grand challenges are to identify the factors controlling the complex architecture of biogeochemical interfaces, to link the processes operative at the molecular and organism scale to phenomena active at the aggregate scale in a mechanistic way and to explain the medium- to long-term behaviour of organic chemicals in soil within a general mechanistic framework. The research is based on the following hypotheses:
(1) The essential features and functioning of biogeochemical interfaces in soil will only emerge when soil physical, biological and chemical approaches are integrated.
(2) Microorganisms are actively involved in the formation and restructuring of biogeochemical interfaces.
(3) The systematic exploration and characterisation of architecture and functioning of soil's biogeochemical interfaces is fundamental to understand the soil's role as a transformer, accumulator and regulator.
(4) Molecular descriptors of the organic chemicals in combination with molecular-scale biogeochemical information on the structure and the dynamics of the biogeochemical interfaces can serve as basis for a general understanding of the behaviour of organic chemicals in soil.
(5) The study of the fate and effect of organic chemicals is obscured by the complex biological and chemical composition of biogeochemical interfaces.
The mechanistic understanding of the relationship of biophysical and geochemical processes and mechanisms at the molecular scale will provide the basis for the integration of information into field-scale concepts and models on the fate and effect as well as on reactivity and bioavailability of organic chemicals in soil. Cutting edge technologies developed in other scientific fields will help substantially to answer the respective questions in soil science.
DFG Programme Priority Programmes
International Connection Austria

Projects

 
 

Additional Information

Textvergrößerung und Kontrastanpassung