环境科学
底土
土壤碳
表土
矿化(土壤科学)
分解者
微生物种群生物学
农学
氮气循环
自行车
植物凋落物
碳循环
生态系统
化学
垃圾箱
环境化学
土壤呼吸
生态学
土壤水分
土壤科学
氮气
生物
历史
遗传学
有机化学
考古
细菌
作者
Erxiong Zhu,Zhenjiao Cao,Juan Jia,Chengzhu Liu,Zhen-Hua Zhang,Hao Wang,Guohua Dai,Jin He,Xiaojuan Feng
摘要
Abstract Subsoils contain >50% of soil organic carbon (SOC) globally yet remain under‐investigated in terms of their response to climate changes. Recent evidence suggests that warmer, drier conditions in alpine grasslands induce divergent responses in SOC decomposition and carbon accrual in top‐ versus subsoils. However, longer term effects on microbial activity (i.e., catabolic respiration vs. anabolic growth) and belowground carbon cycling are not well understood. Here we utilized a field manipulation experiment on the Qinghai‐Tibetan Plateau and conducted a 110‐day soil incubation with and without 13 C‐labeled grass litter to assess microbes' role as both SOC “decomposers” and “contributors” in the top‐ (0–10 cm) versus subsoils (30−40 cm) after 5 years of warming and drought treatments. Microbial mineralization of both SOC and added litter was examined in tandem with potential extracellular enzyme activities, while microbial biomass synthesis and necromass accumulation were analyzed using phospholipid fatty acids and amino sugars coupled with 13 C analysis, respectively. We found that warming and, to a lesser extent, drought decreased the ratio of inorganic nitrogen (N) to water‐extractable organic carbon in the subsoil, intensifying N limitation at depth. Both SOC and litter mineralization were reduced in the subsoil, which may also be related to N limitation, as evidenced by lower hydrolase activity (especially leucine aminopeptidase) and reduced microbial efficiency (lower biomass synthesis and necromass accumulation relative to respiration). However, none of these effects were observed in the topsoil, suggesting that soil microbes became inactive and inefficient in subsoil but not topsoil environments. Given increasing belowground productivity in this alpine grassland under warming, both elevated root deposits and diminished microbial activity may contribute to new carbon accrual in the subsoil. However, the sustainability of plant growth and persistence of subsoil SOC pools deserve further investigation in the long term, given the aggravated N limitation at depth.
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