4.8 Article

Inhibitory effects of climate change on the growth and extracellular enzyme activities of a widespread Antarctic soil fungus

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages 1111-1125

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15456

Keywords

Antarctica; climate warming; cold adaptation; extracellular enzymes; growth inhibition; psychrotrophy; soil fungi; water

Funding

  1. Antarctic Funding Initiative award [NE/D00893X/1]
  2. NERC GW4+ Doctoral Training Partnership studentship [NE/L002434/1]
  3. NERC
  4. NERC [bas0100036] Funding Source: UKRI

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Research has shown that raising temperatures above 20 degrees Celsius in Antarctic barren fellfield soils during summer can significantly reduce the abundance of decomposer fungi, such as Pseudogymnoascus roseus. High temperatures and high water availability also lead to decreased hyphal extension rates and enzyme activities in these cold-adapted microbes, indicating potential inhibitory effects of climate change on their metabolism.
Temperatures approaching or exceeding 20 degrees C have been measured during summer in polar regions at the surfaces of barren fellfield soils under cloudless skies around solar noon. However, despite the upper temperature limit for the growth of cold-adapted microbes-which are abundant in polar soils and have pivotal roles in nutrient cycling-typically being close to this temperature, previous studies have not addressed the consequences of climate change for the metabolism of these organisms in the natural environment. Here in a 5-year field experiment on Alexander Island in the southern maritime Antarctic, we show that the abundance of Pseudogymnoascus roseus, the most widespread decomposer fungus in maritime Antarctic fellfield soils, is reduced by 1-2 orders of magnitude when irrigated and nutrient-amended soils are warmed to >20 degrees C during summer. Laboratory experiments under conditions mimicking those during midsummer in the natural environment indicated that the hyphal extension rates of P. roseus isolates and the activities of five extracellular enzymes are reduced by 54%-96% at high water availability after exposure to temperatures cycling daily from 2 to 21 degrees C and 2 to 24 degrees C, relative to temperatures cycling from 2 to 18 degrees C. Given that the temperatures of surface soils at the study site already reach 19 degrees C during midsummer, the observations reported here suggest that, at predicted rates of warming arising from moderate greenhouse gas emissions, inhibitory effects of climate change on the metabolism of P. roseus could manifest themselves within the next few decades. Furthermore, with peak temperatures at the surfaces of fellfield soils at other maritime Antarctic locations and in High Arctic and alpine regions already exceeding 20 degrees C during summer, the observations suggest that climate warming has the potential to inhibit the growth of other cold-adapted microbes, with negative effects on soils as the Earth's climate continues to warm.

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