土壤碳
环境科学
分解
碳循环
期限(时间)
环境化学
全球变暖
碳纤维
土壤科学
土壤有机质
生态学
土壤水分
气候变化
化学
生态系统
生物
材料科学
物理
复合数
复合材料
量子力学
作者
Wenting Feng,Junyi Liang,Lauren Hale,Chang Gyo Jung,Ji Chen,Jizhong Zhou,Minggang Xu,Mengting Yuan,Liyou Wu,Rosvel Bracho,Elaine Pegoraro,Edward A. G. Schuur,Yiqi Luo
摘要
Abstract Quantifying soil organic carbon ( SOC ) decomposition under warming is critical to predict carbon–climate feedbacks. According to the substrate regulating principle, SOC decomposition would decrease as labile SOC declines under field warming, but observations of SOC decomposition under warming do not always support this prediction. This discrepancy could result from varying changes in SOC components and soil microbial communities under warming. This study aimed to determine the decomposition of SOC components with different turnover times after subjected to long‐term field warming and/or root exclusion to limit C input, and to test whether SOC decomposition is driven by substrate lability under warming. Taking advantage of a 12‐year field warming experiment in a prairie, we assessed the decomposition of SOC components by incubating soils from control and warmed plots, with and without root exclusion for 3 years. We assayed SOC decomposition from these incubations by combining inverse modeling and microbial functional genes during decomposition with a metagenomic technique (GeoChip). The decomposition of SOC components with turnover times of years and decades, which contributed to 95% of total cumulative CO 2 respiration, was greater in soils from warmed plots. But the decomposition of labile SOC was similar in warmed plots compared to the control. The diversity of C‐degradation microbial genes generally declined with time during the incubation in all treatments, suggesting shifts of microbial functional groups as substrate composition was changing. Compared to the control, soils from warmed plots showed significant increase in the signal intensities of microbial genes involved in degrading complex organic compounds, implying enhanced potential abilities of microbial catabolism. These are likely responsible for accelerated decomposition of SOC components with slow turnover rates. Overall, the shifted microbial community induced by long‐term warming accelerates the decomposition of SOC components with slow turnover rates and thus amplify the positive feedback to climate change.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI