4.7 Article

The phosphorus limitation in the post-fire forest soils increases soil CO2 emission via declining cellular carbon use efficiency and increasing extracellular phosphatase

Journal

CATENA
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2023.106968

Keywords

Carbon use efficiency; Soil respiration; Microbial quotient; Nutrients stoichiometry; Extracellular enzymes

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Wildfires are a major factor in disrupting forest soils and altering the carbon (C) cycle. However, the specific contributions of abiotic and biotic drivers to CO2 emissions in post-fire forest soils are not well understood. This study examined CO2 emissions from burned and unburned forest soils across different latitudes. It found that wildfires increased phosphorous (P) pressure on soil microbes, resulting in decreased microbial biomass and diversity, as well as higher basal respiration. Additionally, the wildfires-induced P:N imbalance led to significant C loss through microbial exploitation of P from soil organic matter.
Wildfires cause severe disruptions to forest soils and modify the carbon (C) cycle in the post-fire soils. Yet, the contribution of abiotic and biotic drivers to CO2 emission in the post-fire forest soils is not well understood. This study investigated soil CO2 emission from the burned and corresponding unburned forest soils across a large latitudinal gradient of mean average precipitation (from 422 to 1640 mm) and temperature (from 0.20 to 25.8 degrees C). We compared the soil chemical properties (e.g., dissolved organic carbon, nutrients) and microbial properties (biomass, metabolic quotient (qCO2), and community diversity and composition) in the burned and unburned soils. Microbial metabolism was also addressed through extracellular enzyme activity and intracellular C use efficiency (CUE) using the stoichiometric modeling approach. Here, we showed that the wildfires: i) increased phosphorous (P) pressure to soil microbes (indicated by increased qCO2), ii) decreased microbial biomass, community diversity and abundance of some microbial groups (e.g., Phylum Actinobacteria), and iii) resulted in larger basal respiration due to lower cellular CUE and higher extracellular alkaline phosphatase (AP) ratio to other enzymes like beta-glucosidase, Cellobiohydrolase and N-Acetyl-glucosaminidase. The latter indicated the wildfires-induced P:N imbalance (P-limitation) caused significant C loss via microbial exploitation of P from soil organic matter. The study highlights the ecological significance of intracellular and extracellular metabo-lisms in soil respiration and consequent C sequestration in post-fire forest soils.

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