4.6 Article

Long-term warming effects on the microbiome and nifH gene abundance of a common moss species in sub-Arctic tundra

Journal

NEW PHYTOLOGIST
Volume 234, Issue 6, Pages 2044-2056

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/nph.17837

Keywords

climate change; microbiome; moss; nifH; Racomitrium lanuginosum; shrub expansion; tundra

Categories

Funding

  1. MicroArctic Innovative Training Network grant by the European Commission's Horizon 2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions program [675546]

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The study revealed significant impacts of warming and litter on the microbial composition and diversity of Arctic mosses, especially on nitrogen-fixing bacterial communities. The data suggest that future warming may result in increased sensitivity of moss microbial communities and nitrogen-fixing taxa to changes, particularly due to shifts in litter and shrub abundance.
Bacterial communities form the basis of biogeochemical processes and determine plant growth and health. Mosses harbour diverse bacterial communities that are involved in nitrogen fixation and carbon cycling. Global climate change is causing changes in aboveground plant biomass and shifting species composition in the Arctic, but little is known about the response of moss microbiomes in these environments. Here, we studied the total and potentially active bacterial communities associated with Racomitrium lanuginosum in response to a 20-yr in situ warming in an Icelandic heathland. We evaluated the effect of warming and warming-induced shrub expansion on the moss bacterial community composition and diversity, and nifH gene abundance. Warming changed both the total and the potentially active bacterial community structure, while litter abundance only affected the total bacterial community structure. The abundance of nifH genes was negatively affected by litter abundance. We also found shifts in the potentially nitrogen-fixing community, with Nostoc decreasing and noncyanobacterial diazotrophs increasing in relative abundance. Our data suggest that the moss microbial community and potentially nitrogen fixing taxa will be sensitive to future warming, partly via changes in litter and shrub abundance.

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