4.8 Article

Temperature sensitivity of SOM decomposition is linked with a K-selected microbial community

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 12, Pages 2763-2779

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15593

Keywords

carbon degradation genes; carbon quality and bioavailability; carbon quality‐ temperature hypothesis; microbial community composition; microbial respiration; microbial r‐ K selection theory; soil organic matter decomposition

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31570501, 31811530080, 31870482]
  2. International Cooperation
  3. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [31811530080]
  4. RUDN University program [5-100]

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The temperature sensitivity (Q(10)) of soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition increases with mean annual temperature (MAT) but decreases with SOM bioavailability. The prevalence of K-strategy microbial communities in soil is associated with increased Q(10) values, indicating their important role in the decomposition of recalcitrant organic matter.
Temperature sensitivity (Q(10)) of soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition is a crucial parameter to predict the fate of soil carbon (C) under global warming. Nonetheless, the response pattern of Q(10) to continuous warming and the underlying mechanisms are still under debate, especially considering the complex interactions between Q(10), SOM quality, and soil microorganisms. We examined the Q(10) of SOM decomposition across a mean annual temperature (MAT) gradient from -1.9 to 5.1 degrees C in temperate mixed forest ecosystems in parallel with SOM quality and bioavailability, microbial taxonomic composition, and functional genes responsible for organic carbon decomposition. Within this temperature gradient of 7.0 degrees C, the Q(10) values increased with MAT, but decreased with SOM bioavailability. The Q(10) values increased with the prevalence of K-strategy of soil microbial community, which was characterized by: (i) high ratios of oligotrophic to copiotrophic taxa, (ii) ectomycorrhizal to saprotrophic fungi, (iii) functional genes responsible for degradation of recalcitrant to that of labile C, and (iv) low average 16S rRNA operon copy number. Because the recalcitrant organic matter was mainly utilized by the K-strategists, these findings independently support the carbon quality-temperature theory from the perspective of microbial taxonomic composition and functions. A year-long incubation experiment was performed to determine the response of labile and recalcitrant C pools to warming based on the two-pool model. The decomposition of recalcitrant SOM was more sensitive to increased temperature in southern warm regions, which might attribute to the dominance of K-selected microbial communities. It implies that climate warming would mobilize the larger recalcitrant pools in warm regions, exacerbating the positive feedback between increased MAT and CO2 efflux. This is the first attempt to link temperature sensitivity of SOM decomposition with microbial eco-strategies by incorporating the genetic information and disentangling the complex relationship between Q(10) and soil microorganisms.

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