4.6 Article

Exponential growth of snow molds at sub-zero temperatures: an explanation for high beneath-snow respiration rates and Q 10 values

Journal

BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 1, Pages 13-21

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10533-008-9247-y

Keywords

Sub-nivian biogeochemistry; Arrhenius function; Michaelis-Menten kinetics; Soil respiration; Psychrophiles

Funding

  1. Microbial Observatories Program of the National Science Foundation [MCB-0455606]
  2. Western Section of the National Institute for Climate Change Research [NICCR-MPC35TX-A2]
  3. US Department of Energy (BER Program)

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Numerous studies have demonstrated exceptionally high temperature sensitivity of the beneath-snow respiratory flux in cold-winter ecosystems. The most common, but still untested, explanation for this high sensitivity is a physical one based on the observation that water availability in soils increases exponentially as soils warm from -3 to 0A degrees C. Here, we present evidence for a biological hypothesis to explain exponential kinetics and high Q (10) values as beneath-snow soils warm from -3 to 0A degrees C during the early spring in a high-elevation subalpine forest. First, we show that some of the dominant organisms of the beneath-snow microbial community, snow molds, exhibit robust exponential growth at temperatures from -3 to -0.3A degrees C. Second, Q (10) values based on growth rates across the temperature range of -2 to -0.3A degrees C for these snow molds vary from 22 to 330. Third, we derive an analytical equation that combines the relative contributions of microbial growth and microbial metabolism to the temperature sensitivity of respiration. Finally, we use this equation to show that with only moderate snow mold growth (several generations), the combined sensitivities of growth and metabolism to small changes in beneath-snow soil temperature, create a double exponential in the Q (10) function that may explain the extremely high (similar to 1 x 10(6)) Q (10) values observed in past studies. Our biological explanation for high Q (10) levels is supported by several independent studies that have demonstrated build up of microbial biomass under the snow as temperatures warm from -2 to 0A degrees C.

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