Thermal adaptation of microbial respiration persists throughout long‐term soil carbon decomposition

Author:

Li Jinquan1ORCID,Pei Junmin12,Fang Changming1,Li Bo13ORCID,Nie Ming1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Biodiversity Science and Ecological Engineering, National Observations and Research Station for Wetland Ecosystems of the Yangtze Estuary, Institute of Biodiversity Science and Institute of Eco‐Chongming, School of Life Sciences Fudan University Shanghai China

2. College of Life Sciences Shanghai Normal University Shanghai China

3. Yunnan Key Laboratory of Plant Reproductive Adaptation and Evolutionary Ecology and Centre for Invasion Biology, Institute of Biodiversity, School of Ecology and Environmental Science Yunnan University Kunming Yunnan China

Abstract

AbstractSoil microbial respiration is expected to show adaptations to changing temperatures, greatly weakening the magnitude of feedback over time, as shown in labile carbon substrates. However, whether such thermal adaptation persists during long‐term soil carbon decomposition as carbon substrates decrease in decomposability remains unknown. Here, we conducted a 6‐year incubation experiment in natural and arable soils with distinct properties under three temperatures (10, 20 and 30°C). Mass‐specific microbial respiration was consistently lower under higher long‐term incubation temperatures, suggesting the occurrence and persistence of microbial thermal adaptation in long‐term soil carbon decomposition. Furthermore, changes in microbial community composition and function largely explained the persistence of microbial respiratory thermal adaptation. If such thermal adaptation generally occurs in large low‐decomposability carbon pools, warming‐induced soil carbon losses may be lower than previously predicted and thus may not contribute as much as expected to greenhouse warming.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Program of Shanghai Academic Research Leader

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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