Abstract
Soils store the largest amount of carbon (C) in the biosphere, and the C
pool in soil is critical to the global C balance. Numerous microbial
models have been developed over the last few decades to represent
microbial processes that regulate the responses of soil organic carbon
(SOC) to climate change. However, the representation of microbial
processes varies, and how microbial processes are incorporated into SOC
models has not been well explored. Here, we reviewed 70 microbial models
to characterize the microbial processes incorporated into SOC models and
analyzed variations in mechanistic complexity. We revealed that (1) four
processes (microbial decomposition, mineral interaction, microbial
mortality, and transition between active and dormant microbial states)
are commonly incorporated in microbial models, (2) ~47%
of models simulate only one (i.e., microbial decomposition) and 33%
simulated two microbial processes: microbial decomposition and mineral
interaction, (3) more than 80% microbial models use nonlinear
mathematical equations, such as forward Michaelis-Menten kinetics, to
represent SOC decomposition, (4) the concept of persistence of SOC due
to its intrinsic properties has been replaced by organo-mineral
interaction (~39% of microbial models) that protects
SOC from decomposition, and (5) various temperature and moisture
modifiers and pH effects have been used to explain the environmental
effect on microbial processes. Finally, we propose a roadmap for SOC
model improvement. In the future, to realistically incorporate microbial
processes into Earth System Models, it is imperative to identify
experimental evidence on rate limitation processes and firmly ground
model structure on the field and laboratory data.