4.8 Article

Carbon quality and soil microbial property control the latitudinal pattern in temperature sensitivity of soil microbial respiration across Chinese forest ecosystems

Journal

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY
Volume 24, Issue 7, Pages 2841-2849

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/gcb.14105

Keywords

climate-carbon feedback; global warming; soil microbial community; soil organic matter decomposition; spatial variation; temperature sensitivity

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31570466]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2016YFA0600801]
  3. Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB15010301]

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Understanding the temperature sensitivity (Q(10)) of soil organic C (SOC) decomposition is critical to quantifying the climate-carbon cycle feedback and predicting the response of ecosystems to climate change. However, the driving factors of the spatial variation in Q(10) at a continental scale are fully unidentified. In this study, we conducted a novel incubation experiment with periodically varying temperature based on the mean annual temperature of the soil origin sites. A total of 140 soil samples were collected from 22 sites along a 3,800km long north-south transect of forests in China, and the Q(10) of soil microbial respiration and corresponding environmental variables were measured. Results showed that changes in the Q(10) values were nonlinear with latitude, particularly showing low Q(10) values in subtropical forests and high Q(10) values in temperate forests. The soil C:N ratio was positively related to the Q(10) values, and coniferous forest soils with low SOC quality had higher Q(10) values than broadleaved forest soils with high SOC quality, which supported the C quality temperature hypothesis. Out of the spatial variations in Q(10) across all ecosystems, gram-negative bacteria exhibited the most importance in regulating the variation in Q(10) and contributed 25.1%, followed by the C:N ratio (C quality), fungi, and the fungi:bacteria ratio. However, the dominant factors that regulate the regional variations in Q(10) differed among the tropical, subtropical, and temperate forest ecosystems. Overall, our findings highlight the importance of C quality and microbial controls over Q(10) value in China's forest ecosystems. Meanwhile, C dynamics in temperate forests under a global warming scenario can be robustly predicted through the incorporation of substrate quality and microbial property into models.

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