4.8 Article

Microbial metabolic response to winter warming stabilizes soil carbon

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 10, Pages 2011-2028

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15538

Keywords

carbon degradation genes; microbial anabolism; microbial community; SOC stabilization; soil aggregate turnover; winter warming

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31770560, 32071629, 41703079]
  2. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFA0604803]

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The study reveals that winter warming on the Tibetan Plateau results in reduced microbial decomposition and enhanced physical protection of organic compounds in soil, leading to the enhanced physical preservation of SOC. This divergent response of SOC persistence to winter warming compared to year-round warming highlights the important role of soil microorganisms in aggregate life cycles and suggests potential negative feedbacks to global climate change.
Current consensus on global climate change predicts warming trends with more pronounced temperature changes in winter than summer in the Northern Hemisphere at high latitudes. Moderate increases in soil temperature are generally related to faster rates of soil organic carbon (SOC) decomposition in Northern ecosystems, but there is evidence that SOC stocks have remained remarkably stable or even increased on the Tibetan Plateau under these conditions. This intriguing observation points to altered soil microbial mediation of carbon-cycling feedbacks in this region that might be related to seasonal warming. This study investigated the unexplained SOC stabilization observed on the Tibetan Plateau by quantifying microbial responses to experimental seasonal warming in a typical alpine meadow. Ecosystem respiration was reduced by 17%-38% under winter warming compared with year-round warming or no warming and coincided with decreased abundances of fungi and functional genes that control labile and stable organic carbon decomposition. Compared with year-round warming, winter warming slowed macroaggregate turnover rates by 1.6 times, increased fine intra-aggregate particulate organic matter content by 75%, and increased carbon stabilized in microaggregates within stable macroaggregates by 56%. Larger bacterial necromass (amino sugars) concentrations in soil under winter warming coincided with a 12% increase in carboxyl-C. These results indicate the enhanced physical preservation of SOC under winter warming and emphasize the role of soil microorganisms in aggregate life cycles. In summary, the divergent responses of SOC persistence in soils exposed to winter warming compared to year-round warming are explained by the slowing of microbial decomposition but increasing physical protection of microbially derived organic compounds. Consequently, the soil microbial response to winter warming on the Tibetan Plateau may cause negative feedbacks to global climate change and should be considered in Earth system models.

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