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Dive into the research topics where Holger Pagel is active.

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Featured researches published by Holger Pagel.


Science of The Total Environment | 2016

The impact of chemical pollution on the resilience of soils under multiple stresses: A conceptual framework for future research.

Andreas Schaeffer; Wulf Amelung; Henner Hollert; Matthias Kaestner; Ellen Kandeler; Jens Kruse; Anja Miltner; Richard Ottermanns; Holger Pagel; Stephan Peth; Christian Poll; Gerhard Rambold; Michael Schloter; Stefanie Schulz; Thilo Streck; Martina Roß-Nickoll

Soils are faced with man-made chemical stress factors, such as the input of organic or metal-containing pesticides, in combination with non-chemical stressors like soil compaction and natural disturbance like drought. Although multiple stress factors are typically co-occurring in soil ecosystems, research in soil sciences on this aspect is limited and focuses mostly on single structural or functional endpoints. A mechanistic understanding of the reaction of soils to multiple stressors is currently lacking. Based on a review of resilience theory, we introduce a new concept for research on the ability of polluted soil (xenobiotics or other chemical pollutants as one stressor) to resist further natural or anthropogenic stress and to retain its functions and structure. There is strong indication that pollution as a primary stressor will change the system reaction of soil, i.e., its resilience, stability and resistance. It can be expected that pollution affects the physiological adaption of organisms and the functional redundancy of the soil to further stress. We hypothesize that the recovery of organisms and chemical-physical properties after impact of a follow-up stressor is faster in polluted soil than in non-polluted soil, i.e., polluted soil has a higher dynamical stability (dynamical stability=1/recovery time), whereas resilience of the contaminated soil is lower compared to that of not or less contaminated soil. Thus, a polluted soil might be more prone to change into another system regime after occurrence of further stress. We highlight this issue by compiling the literature exemplarily for the effects of Cu contamination and compaction on soil functions and structure. We propose to intensify research on effects of combined stresses involving a multidisciplinary team of experts and provide suggestions for corresponding experiments. Our concept offers thus a framework for system level analysis of soils paving the way to enhance ecological theory.


FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2013

Succession of bacterial and fungal 4-chloro-2-methylphenoxyacetic acid degraders at the soil-litter interface

Franziska Ditterich; Christian Poll; Holger Pagel; Doreen Babin; Kornelia Smalla; Marcus A. Horn; Thilo Streck; Ellen Kandeler

Phenoxyacetic acids can be degraded by diverse soil microorganisms. Nevertheless, we miss information about the succession of 4-chloro-2-methylphenoxyacetic acid (MCPA) degraders in micro-environments of soils as well as specific functions of different microbial groups during MCPA degradation. We studied MCPA degradation at the soil-litter interface in a microcosm experiment and followed the succession of different degrader populations by quantifying the abundance of 16S rRNA genes as well as, the fungal ITS fragment and the functional genes tfdA (in total and divided into three classes) and cadA. Adjacent to the litter layer, a dynamic depletion zone of MCPA indicated that the litter effect on MCPA degradation depends on substrate availability and the affected soil volume. The increase of the tfdA class III and cadA genes was linked to MCPA mineralisation. Total abundance of tfdA genes was dominated by class I MCPA degraders and did not reflect MCPA degradation potential of the soil. Litter addition induced the development of pioneer and late-stage fungal communities, which were probably both involved in MCPA degradation. The results underline the importance of the ecological behaviour of different degrader populations for the understanding of herbicide degradation in soils.


Biogeochemistry | 2014

Micro-scale modeling of pesticide degradation coupled to carbon turnover in the detritusphere: model description and sensitivity analysis

Holger Pagel; Joachim Ingwersen; Christian Poll; Ellen Kandeler; Thilo Streck

Microbiologically active biogeochemical interfaces are excellent systems to study soil functions such as pesticide degradation at the micro-scale. In particular, in the detritusphere pesticide degradation is accelerated by input of fresh organic carbon from litter into the adjacent soil. This observed priming effect suggests: (i) pesticide degradation is strongly coupled to carbon turnover, (ii) it is controlled by size and activity of the microbial community and (iii) sorption and transport of dissolved carbonaceous compounds and pesticides might regulate substrate availability and in turn decomposition processes. We present a new mechanistic 1D model (PEsticide degradation Coupled to CArbon turnover in the Detritusphere, PECCAD) which implements these hypotheses. The new model explicitly considers growth and activity of bacteria, fungi and specific pesticide degraders in response to substrate availability. Enhanced pesticide degradation due to availability of a second source of carbon (dissolved organic carbon) is implemented in the model structure via two mechanisms. First, additional substrate is utilized simultaneously with the pesticide by bacterial pesticide degraders resulting in an increase in their size and activity. Second, stimulation of fungal growth and activity by additional substrates leads directly to higher pesticide degradation via co-metabolism. Thus, PECCAD implicitly accounts for litter-stimulated production and activity of unspecific fungal enzymes responsible for co-metabolic pesticide degradation. With a global sensitivity analysis we identified high-leverage model parameters and input. In combination with appropriate experimental data, PECCAD can serve as a tool to elucidate regulation mechanisms of accelerated pesticide degradation in the detritusphere.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2010

Regulation of bacterial and fungal MCPA degradation at the soil–litter interface

Christian Poll; Holger Pagel; Marion Devers-Lamrani; Fabrice Martin-Laurent; Joachim Ingwersen; Thilo Streck; Ellen Kandeler


Soil Science Society of America Journal | 2008

Total Phosphorus Determination in Colloid-Containing Soil Solutions by Enhanced Persulfate Digestion

Holger Pagel; Katrin Ilg; Jan Siemens; Martin Kaupenjohann


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2016

Modeling coupled pesticide degradation and organic matter turnover: From gene abundance to process rates

Holger Pagel; Christian Poll; Joachim Ingwersen; Ellen Kandeler; Thilo Streck


Biology and Fertility of Soils | 2012

The influence of the herbicide 2-methyl-4-chlorophenoxyacetic acid (MCPA) on the mineralization of litter-derived alkanes and the abundance of the alkane monooxygenase gene (alkB) in the detritusphere of Pisum sativum (L.)

Stephan Schulz; Tatiana Yuyunkina; Holger Pagel; Lukas Y. Wick; Christian Poll; Thilo Streck; Ellen Kandeler; Michael Schloter


Environmental Science and Pollution Research | 2016

Evidence for the importance of litter as a co-substrate for MCPA dissipation in an agricultural soil

Omar Saleh; Holger Pagel; Esther Enowashu; Marion Devers; Fabrice Martin-Laurent; Thilo Streck; Ellen Kandeler; Christian Poll


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2018

Water flow drives small scale biogeography of pesticides and bacterial pesticide degraders - A microcosm study using 2,4-D as a model compound

Marc Pinheiro; Holger Pagel; Christian Poll; Franziska Ditterich; Patricia Garnier; Thilo Streck; Ellen Kandeler; Laure Vieublé Gonod


EGU | 2018

Matching Application with Detection – A combined approach for pesticide monitoring on arable land using lysimters and pressurized liquid extraction

Michael Lesch; Björn Thiele; Peter Grathwohl; Thilo Streck; Diana Hofmann; Hermann Rügner; Holger Pagel

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Thilo Streck

University of Hohenheim

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Fabrice Martin-Laurent

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Laure Vieublé Gonod

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Marc Pinheiro

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Patricia Garnier

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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