底土
微生物种群生物学
土壤水分
环境科学
全球变暖
土壤呼吸
土壤碳
气候变化
温带气候
生态学
土壤科学
农学
生物
细菌
遗传学
作者
Nicholas C. Dove,M. S. Torn,Stephen C. Hart,Neslihan Taş
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-021-22408-5
摘要
Increasing global temperatures are predicted to stimulate soil microbial respiration. The direct and indirect impacts of warming on soil microbes, nevertheless, remain unclear. This is particularly true for understudied subsoil microbes. Here, we show that 4.5 years of whole-profile soil warming in a temperate mixed forest results in altered microbial community composition and metabolism in surface soils, partly due to carbon limitation. However, microbial communities in the subsoil responded differently to warming than in the surface. Throughout the soil profile-but to a greater extent in the subsoil-physiologic and genomic measurements show that phylogenetically different microbes could utilize complex organic compounds, dampening the effect of altered resource availability induced by warming. We find subsoil microbes had 20% lower carbon use efficiencies and 47% lower growth rates compared to surface soils, which constrain microbial communities. Collectively, our results show that unlike in surface soils, elevated microbial respiration in subsoils may continue without microbial community change in the near-term.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI