Plant litter chemistry drives long‐lasting changes in the catabolic capacities of soil microbial communities

Author:

Bourget Malo Y.1ORCID,Fanin Nicolas2ORCID,Fromin Nathalie3,Hättenschwiler Stephan3,Roumet Catherine3ORCID,Shihan Ammar3,Huys Raoul1ORCID,Sauvadet Marie4ORCID,Freschet Grégoire T.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Station d'Écologie Théorique et Expérimentale CNRS Moulis France

2. INRAE Bordeaux Sciences Agro, UMR 1391 ISPA Villenave‐d'Ornon France

3. Centre d'Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive Univ Montpellier, CNRS, EPHE, IRD Montpellier France

4. Eco&Sols Univ Montpellier, IRD, INRA, CIRAD, Montpellier SupAgro Montpellier France

Abstract

Abstract Although microbial communities play an important role in explaining plant litter decomposition rates, whether and how litter chemistry may alter catabolic capacities of soil microbial communities remains poorly studied. During a 1‐year litter decomposition experiment of 12 herbaceous species with contrasting litter chemistry, we examined the effect of plant litter type (roots vs. leaves) and litter chemical traits on the resulting capacity of soil microbial communities to degrade a wide range of carbon substrates of variable complexity (MicroResp™ method). Litter chemistry impacted both the total catabolic activity as well as specific catabolic capacities of microbial communities. In the early stages of litter decomposition total catabolic activity was mainly influenced by the amount of C and N in litter leachates, and litter N, P and Mg, then, later, by lignin concentrations. Some specific catabolic capacities could also be related to litter initial chemistry. Overall, litter trait effects on soil microbial communities decreased over time and the relative importance of traits shifted during the decomposition process. Our results highlight that litter chemistry is a strong driver of catabolic capacities of microbial decomposers and, while its effect fades with time, it remains substantial throughout the litter decomposition process. These long‐lasting effects of litter chemistry suggest a persistent control on microbial catabolic capacities in ecosystems with recurrent litter production. Soil microbial catabolic activities were driven by broadly the same chemical traits across leaf and root litters. Synthesis. Such long‐lasting effects of litter chemistry on catabolic capacities of microbial communities may represent a substantial indirect driver of the decomposition process. Disentangling the relative importance of this overlooked effect of litter chemistry on decomposition represents the next challenge. We argue that such research line should open ground‐breaking perspectives for reconsidering our current understanding of the mechanistic links between litter traits and decomposition rate. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Funder

Centre Méditerranéen de l’Environnement et de la Biodiversité

Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

Reference64 articles.

1. Litterfall production and fine root dynamics in cool-temperate forests

2. A temporal approach to linking aboveground and belowground ecology

3. Barton K.(2020).MuMIn: Multi‐model inference.https://cran.r‐project.org/package=MuMIn

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