Salvatore Calabrese

Texas A&M University | Assistant Professor

Subject Areas: Hydrology, Ecohydrology

 Recent Activity

ABSTRACT:

Soil carbon cycling and ecosystem functioning can strongly depend on how microbial communities regulate their metabolism and adapt to changing environmental conditions to improve their fitness. Investing in extracellular enzymes is an important strategy for the acquisition of resources, but the principle behind the trade-offs between enzyme production and growth is not entirely clear. In the paper associated to this resource, we show that the enzyme production rate per unit biomass may be regulated in order to maximize the biomass specific growth rate. Here we provide the Mathematica code, with data embedded, used to draw the Figures.

Show More

ABSTRACT:

Microbial growth is a clear example of organization and structure arising in non-equilibrium conditions. Due to the complexity of the microbial metabolic network, elucidating the fundamental principles governing microbial growth remains a challenge. Here leveraging decades of experimental data on growth of microbial isolates, we study in depth the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of microbial growth to shed light on the relation between mass and energy constraints on growth. Our results show that there exist universal scaling laws relating the thermodynamic efficiency of microbial growth to the electron donor uptake rate and to the growth yield, which tightly couple mass and energy conversion in microbial growth. This resource contains an excel file with original data from Smeaton and Van Cappellen (2018) and the thermodynamic calculations for the article associated to this resource, and a Mathematica code used for drawing the Figures.

Show More

ABSTRACT:

Global methane (CH4) emissions have reached approximately 600 Tg per year, 20-40% of which are from wetlands. Of the primary factors affecting these emissions, the water table level is among the most uncertain. Here, a global meta-analysis of chamber and flux-tower observations of CH4 emissions shows that wetlands have maximum emissions at a critical level of inundation.

Show More

ABSTRACT:

This dataset contains measurements of chemical depletion fraction (CDF), from three published articles, and estimates for each location of the dryness index (PET/P). To estimate the dryness index, long-term potential evapotranspiration (PET) was retrieved from climate data, while precipitation was provided by the three publication alongside the CDF measurements. The data reveal the strong nonlinear relation between CDF and wetness at the global scale.

Show More

 Contact

Resources
All 0
Collection 0
Resource 0
App Connector 0
Resource Resource
Cimate-Chemical Weathering
Created: June 19, 2020, 4:12 p.m.
Authors: Calabrese, Salvatore · Amilcare Porporato

ABSTRACT:

This dataset contains measurements of chemical depletion fraction (CDF), from three published articles, and estimates for each location of the dryness index (PET/P). To estimate the dryness index, long-term potential evapotranspiration (PET) was retrieved from climate data, while precipitation was provided by the three publication alongside the CDF measurements. The data reveal the strong nonlinear relation between CDF and wetness at the global scale.

Show More
Resource Resource
CH4 emissions from wetlands
Created: Feb. 28, 2021, 9:14 p.m.
Authors: Calabrese, Salvatore

ABSTRACT:

Global methane (CH4) emissions have reached approximately 600 Tg per year, 20-40% of which are from wetlands. Of the primary factors affecting these emissions, the water table level is among the most uncertain. Here, a global meta-analysis of chamber and flux-tower observations of CH4 emissions shows that wetlands have maximum emissions at a critical level of inundation.

Show More
Resource Resource
Energetic scaling in microbial growth_data
Created: May 28, 2021, 9:43 a.m.
Authors: Calabrese, Salvatore · Arjun Chakrawal · Stefano Manzoni · Philippe Van Cappellen

ABSTRACT:

Microbial growth is a clear example of organization and structure arising in non-equilibrium conditions. Due to the complexity of the microbial metabolic network, elucidating the fundamental principles governing microbial growth remains a challenge. Here leveraging decades of experimental data on growth of microbial isolates, we study in depth the non-equilibrium thermodynamics of microbial growth to shed light on the relation between mass and energy constraints on growth. Our results show that there exist universal scaling laws relating the thermodynamic efficiency of microbial growth to the electron donor uptake rate and to the growth yield, which tightly couple mass and energy conversion in microbial growth. This resource contains an excel file with original data from Smeaton and Van Cappellen (2018) and the thermodynamic calculations for the article associated to this resource, and a Mathematica code used for drawing the Figures.

Show More
Resource Resource

ABSTRACT:

Soil carbon cycling and ecosystem functioning can strongly depend on how microbial communities regulate their metabolism and adapt to changing environmental conditions to improve their fitness. Investing in extracellular enzymes is an important strategy for the acquisition of resources, but the principle behind the trade-offs between enzyme production and growth is not entirely clear. In the paper associated to this resource, we show that the enzyme production rate per unit biomass may be regulated in order to maximize the biomass specific growth rate. Here we provide the Mathematica code, with data embedded, used to draw the Figures.

Show More