Climate warming alters the relative importance of plant root and microbial community in regulating the accumulation of soil microbial necromass carbon in a Tibetan alpine meadow

Author:

Cai Mengke1ORCID,Zhao Guang1ORCID,Zhao Bo1ORCID,Cong Nan1ORCID,Zheng Zhoutao1ORCID,Zhu Juntao1ORCID,Duan Xiaoqing2,Zhang Yangjian134

Affiliation:

1. Lhasa Plateau Ecosystem Research Station, Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

2. College of Forestry Jiangxi Agricultural University Nanchang China

3. CAS Center for Excellence in Tibetan Plateau Earth Sciences Beijing China

4. College of Resources and Environment University of Chinese Academy of Science Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractClimate warming is predicted to considerably affect variations in soil organic carbon (SOC), especially in alpine ecosystems. Microbial necromass carbon (MNC) is an important contributor to stable soil organic carbon pools. However, accumulation and persistence of soil MNC across a gradient of warming are still poorly understood. An 8‐year field experiment with four levels of warming was conducted in a Tibetan meadow. We found that low‐level (+0–1.5°C) warming mostly enhanced bacterial necromass carbon (BNC), fungal necromass carbon (FNC), and total MNC compared with control treatment across soil layers, while no significant effect was caused between high‐level (+1.5–2.5°C) treatments and control treatments. The contributions of both MNC and BNC to soil organic carbon were not significantly affected by warming treatments across depths. Structural equation modeling analysis demonstrated that the effect of plant root traits on MNC persistence strengthened with warming intensity, while the influence of microbial community characteristics waned along strengthened warming. Overall, our study provides novel evidence that the major determinants of MNC production and stabilization may vary with warming magnitude in alpine meadows. This finding is critical for updating our knowledge on soil carbon storage in response to climate warming.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Environmental Science,Ecology,Environmental Chemistry,Global and Planetary Change

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