Trophic regulation of soil microbial biomass under nitrogen enrichment: A global meta‐analysis

Author:

Xing Wen12ORCID,Chen Xinli3ORCID,Thakur Madhav P.4ORCID,Kardol Paul5ORCID,Lu Xiaoming1ORCID,Bai Yongfei1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

2. Institute of Environment and Sustainable Development in Agriculture Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Beijing China

3. Department of Renewable Resources University of Alberta Edmonton Alberta Canada

4. Institute of Ecology and Evolution and Oeschger Centre for Climate Change Research University of Bern Bern Switzerland

5. Department of Forest Ecology and Management Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Eutrophication, including nitrogen (N) enrichment, can affect soil microbial communities through changes in trophic interactions. However, a knowledge gap still exists about how plant resources (‘bottom‐up effects’) and microbial predators (‘top‐down effects’) regulate the impacts of N enrichment on microbial biomass at the global scale. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted a global meta‐analysis using 2885 paired observations from 217 publications to evaluate the regulatory effects of plant biomass and soil nematodes on soil microbial biomass under N enrichment across terrestrial ecosystems. We found that the effects of N enrichment on soil microbial biomass varied strongly across ecosystems. N enrichment decreased the soil microbial biomass of natural grasslands and forests due to soil acidification and the subsequent losses of predatory and microbivorous nematodes stimulating microbial growth. By contrast, N enrichment increased the microbial biomass of managed croplands mainly via increasing plant biomass production. Across diverse ecosystems, the short‐term N enrichment (experimental duration ≤5 years) could reduce microbial biomass via decreasing nematode abundance, whereas the long‐term N enrichment (experimental duration >5 years) mainly promoted microbial biomass via increasing plant biomass. These findings highlight the critical roles of microbial predators and plant input in shaping microbial responses to N enrichment, which are highly dependent on ecosystem type and the period of N enrichment. Earth system models that predict soil microbial biomass and their linkages to soil functioning should consider the variations in plant biomass and soil nematodes under future scenarios of N deposition. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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