4.7 Article

Adaptation mechanisms of the soil microbial community under stoichiometric imbalances and nutrient-limiting conditions in a subtropical nitrogen-saturated forest

Journal

PLANT AND SOIL
Volume 489, Issue 1-2, Pages 239-258

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11104-023-06014-6

Keywords

Nitrogen deposition; Stoichiometric imbalances; Enzymatic stoichiometry; P limitation; microbial community; N-saturated forest

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The increased nitrogen inputs in terrestrial ecosystems due to human activities have led to changes in both carbon and phosphorus availability, impacting resource stoichiometry. This study examines the effects of nitrogen deposition on phosphorus limitation and microbial activity in a subtropical forest. The results show that nitrogen addition aggravates the existing phosphorus limitation and disrupts the soil microbial community structure and enzymatic activity.
PurposeAnthropogenic activities have increased the nitrogen (N) inputs in terrestrial ecosystems, thereby altering both the carbon (C) and phosphorus (P) availability along with resource stoichiometry. Stoichiometric deviations between microbial biomass and resources availablity cause stoichiometric imbalances and nutrient limitations for microbial activity. However, whether N deposition will further aggravate the existing P limitation is unknown. Furthermore, how soil microbes respond to these conditions, along with the biogeochemical cycles they mediate, still remains unclear.MethodsTo answer these questions, a 7-year N addition experiment (+0, +50, +150 kg N ha(-1) yr(-1); CK, LN, HN) has been conducted in a subtropical evergreen-broadleaved forest in the Rainy Area of West China, where received the highest background N deposition in the world and the highest precipitation in inland China. Soil-available nutrients, microbial biomass, C-, N-, and P-acquiring enzyme activities, microbial community composition and diversity were measured.ResultsWith increasing N addition, the soil DOC:AP and AN:AP ratios increased significantly, whereas microbial biomass C:P and N:P ratios decreased significantly, resulting in increased C:P and N:P imbalances between the soil microbes and resources, thereby aggravating the existing P limitation of microorganisms in this subtropical N-saturated forest. Microbial communities maintained stoichiometric homeostasis by increasing ACP enzyme activity (by 8.99% to 19.28% under N treatment) and threshold elements ratio (TER) at P-limited levels. The aggravated imbalance of C:P and N:P caused by N addition decreased the bacterial and fungal community alpha-diversity. Interestingly, changes in the beta-diversity of the bacterial rather than the fungal community responded more strongly to stoichiometric imbalance. Bacterial communities transitioned from coprophilous (Proteobacteria-dominated) to oligotrophic (Actinobacteriota-dominated) under N addition treatment.ConclusionsThis study not only highlights the importance of stoichiometric imbalances in regulating the soil microbial community structure and enzymatic activity, but also may help in understanding how global N deposition-induced resource stoichiometry changes affect the terrestrial C and nutrient flows.

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