4.6 Article

Microbial community composition controls carbon flux across litter types in early phase of litter decomposition

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 23, Issue 11, Pages 6676-6693

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1462-2920.15705

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Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Biological and Environmental Research Division [F260LANL2015, F255LANL2018]

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Microbial composition plays a crucial role in driving carbon flow variation during leaf litter decomposition, with common microbial traits across multiple litter types. The quantity of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) at the end of the decomposition period is influenced by microbial composition.
Leaf litter decomposition is a major carbon input to soil, making it a target for increasing soil carbon storage through microbiome engineering. We expand upon previous findings to show with multiple leaf litter types that microbial composition can drive variation in carbon flow from litter decomposition and specific microbial community features are associated with synonymous patterns of carbon flow among litter types. Although plant litter type selects for different decomposer communities, within a litter type, microbial composition drives variation in the quantity of dissolved organic carbon (DOC) measured at the end of the decomposition period. Bacterial richness was negatively correlated with DOC quantity, supporting our hypothesis that across multiple litter types there are common microbial traits linked to carbon flow patterns. Variation in DOC abundance (i.e. high versus low DOC) driven by microbial composition is tentatively due to differences in bacterial metabolism of labile compounds, rather than catabolism of non-labile substrates such as lignin. The temporal asynchrony of metabolic processes across litter types may be a substantial impediment to discovering more microbial features common to synonymous patterns of carbon flow among litters. Overall, our findings support the concept that carbon flow may be programmed by manipulating microbial community composition.

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