Microbial Functional Responses Explain Alpine Soil Carbon Fluxes under Future Climate Scenarios

Author:

Qi Qi1,Haowei Yue2,Zhang Zhenhua3,Van Nostrand Joy D.4ORCID,Wu Linwei4,Guo Xue1,Feng Jiajie4,Wang Mengmeng5,Yang Sihang6,Zhao Jianshu1,Gao Qun1,Zhang Qiuting1,Zhao Mengxin1,Xie Changyi1,Ma Zhiyuan7,He Jin-Sheng37,Chu Haiyan8ORCID,Huang Yi9,Zhou Jizhong1410,Yang Yunfeng1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control, School of Environment, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China

2. Ecological Environment Bureau, Shenzhen, China

3. Key Laboratory of Adaptation and Evolution of Plateau Biota, Northwest Institute of Plateau Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xining, China

4. Institute for Environmental Genomics, Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology, and School of Civil Engineering and Environmental Sciences, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma, USA

5. School of Life Sciences, South China Normal University, Guangzhou, China

6. Institute of Public Safety Research, Department of Engineering Physics, Beijing Key Laboratory of City Integrated Emergency Response Science, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China

7. Department of Ecology, College of Urban and Environmental Sciences, and Key Laboratory for Earth Surface Processes of the Ministry of Education, Peking University, Beijing, China

8. State Key Laboratory of Soil and Sustainable Agriculture, Institute of Soil Science, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, China

9. State Key Joint Laboratory of Environmental Simulation and Pollution Control, College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, China

10. Earth and Environmental Sciences Division, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California, USA

Abstract

The warming pace in the Tibetan Plateau, which is predominantly occupied by grassland ecosystems, has been 0.2°C per decade in recent years, dwarfing the rate of global warming by a factor of 2. Many Earth system models project substantial carbon sequestration in Tibet, which has been observed.

Funder

National Science Foundation of China

National Science foundation of China

National Program on Key Basic Research Project

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Naitonal Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Microbiology

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