4.8 Article

Depth-dependent drivers of soil microbial necromass carbon across Tibetan alpine grasslands

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 3, Pages 936-949

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.15969

Keywords

carbon cycle; carbon-climate feedback; deep soil; microbial residue; mineral protection; plant carbon input

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31825006, 31988102, 91837312]
  2. Second Tibetan Plateau Scientific Expedition and Research (STEP) [2019QZKK0106]
  3. Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences [QYZDB-SSW--SMC049]

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The study found a relatively low proportion of microbial necromass carbon in Tibetan alpine grasslands compared to global grasslands, with different major determinants of microbial necromass carbon in topsoil and subsoil. The findings suggest that soil depth plays a crucial role in determining the drivers of microbial necromass carbon and should be considered in Earth system models for accurate predictions of soil carbon dynamics and its feedback to global warming.
Microbial necromass carbon (C) has been considered an important contributor to persistent soil C pool. However, there still lacks large-scale systematic observations on microbial necromass C in different soil layers, particularly for alpine ecosystems. Besides, it is still unclear whether the relative importance of biotic and abiotic variables such as plant C input and mineral properties in regulating microbial necromass C would change with soil depth. Based on the combination of large-scale sampling along a similar to 2200 km transect across Tibetan alpine grasslands and biomarker analysis, together with a global data synthesis across grassland ecosystems, we observed a relatively low proportion of microbial-derived C in Tibetan alpine grasslands compared to global grasslands (topsoil: 45.4% vs. 58.1%; subsoil: 41.7% vs. 53.7%). We also found that major determinants of microbial necromass C depended on soil depth. In topsoil, both plant C input and mineral protection exerted dominant effects on microbial necromass C. However, in subsoil, the physico-chemical protection provided by soil clay particles, iron-aluminum oxides, and exchangeable calcium dominantly facilitated the preservation of microbial necromass C. The differential drivers over microbial necromass C between soil depths should be considered in Earth system models for accurately forecasting soil C dynamics and its potential feedback to global warming.

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