4.6 Article

Altered utilization patterns of young and old soil C by microorganisms caused by temperature shifts and N additions

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BIOGEOCHEMISTRY
卷 67, 期 2, 页码 235-248

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KLUWER ACADEMIC PUBL
DOI: 10.1023/B:BIOG.0000015321.51462.41

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C-13-PLFA; carbon cycling; enzyme activities; microbial community composition; respiration; temperature

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To determine if changes in microbial community composition and metabolic capacity alter decomposition patterns of young and old soil carbon pools, we incubated soils under conditions of varying temperature, N-availability, and water content. We used a soil from a pineapple plantation (CAM; delta(13)C litter = -14.1parts per thousand) that had previously been under tropical forest (C3; delta(13)C soil carbon = -26.5parts per thousand). Forest derived carbon represented 'old' carbon and plantation inputs represented 'new' carbon. In order to differentiate utilization of young (< 14 years) and old (> 14 years) soil carbon, we measured the delta(13)C of respired CO2 and microbial phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) during a 103 day laboratory incubation. We determined community composition (PLFA and bacterial intergenic transcribed spacer (ITS) analysis) in addition to carbon degrading and nutrient releasing enzyme activities. We observed that greater quantities of older carbon were respired at higher temperatures (20 and 35degreesC) compared to the lower temperature (5degreesC). This effect could be explained by changes in microbial community composition and accompanying changes in enzyme activities that affect C degradation. Nitrogen addition stimulated the utilization of older soil carbon, possibly due to greater peroxidase activity, but microbial community composition was unaffected by this treatment. Increasing soil moisture had no effect on the utilization of older SOM, but enzyme activity typically declined. Increased oxidative enzyme activities in response to elevated temperature and nitrogen additions point to a plausible mechanism for alterations in C resource utilization patterns.

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