4.7 Article

Herbivory changes soil microbial communities and greenhouse gas fluxes in a high-latitude wetland

Journal

MICROBIAL ECOLOGY
Volume 83, Issue 1, Pages 127-136

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00248-021-01733-8

Keywords

Carbon dioxide; Grazing; Methane; Migratory geese; Soil carbon cycling; Tundra; Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [ARC-1304523, ARCCS-1932889]
  2. Utah State University (USU) Research Catalyst grant
  3. USU Research and Graduate Studies Dissertation Enhancement
  4. Utah Agricultural Experiment Station

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Herbivory can have strong impacts on greenhouse gas fluxes in high-latitude ecosystems. Differences in trace gas fluxes between grazed and ungrazed areas may result both from herbivore-induced shifts in abiotic parameters and grazing-related alterations in microbial community structure.
Herbivory can have strong impacts on greenhouse gas fluxes in high-latitude ecosystems. For example, in the Yukon-Kuskokwim (Y-K) Delta in western Alaska, migratory goose grazing affects the magnitude of soil carbon dioxide (CO2) and methane (CH4) fluxes. However, the underlying drivers of this relationship are unclear, as few studies systematically tease apart the processes by which herbivores influences soil biogeochemistry. To examine these mechanisms in detail, we conducted a laboratory incubation experiment to quantify changes in greenhouse gas fluxes in response to three parameters altered by herbivores in situ: temperature, soil moisture content, and nutrient inputs. These treatments were applied to soils collected in grazing lawns and nearby ungrazed habitat, allowing us to assess how variation in microbial community structure influenced observed responses. We found pronounced differences in both fungal and prokaryotic community composition between grazed and ungrazed areas. In the laboratory incubation experiment, CO2 and CH4 fluxes increased with temperature, soil moisture, and goose fecal addition, suggesting that grazing-related changes in the soil abiotic environment may enhance soil C losses. Yet, these abiotic drivers were insufficient to explain variation in fluxes between soils with and without prior grazing. Differences in trace gas fluxes between grazed and ungrazed areas may result both from herbivore-induced shifts in abiotic parameters and grazing-related alterations in microbial community structure. Our findings suggest that relationships among herbivores and soil microbial communities could mediate carbon-climate feedbacks in rapidly changing high-latitude ecosystems.

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