Switch of fungal to bacterial degradation in natural, drained and rewetted oligotrophic peatlands reflected in <i>δ</i><sup>15</sup>N and fatty acid composition
Author:
Groß-Schmölders Miriam, von Sengbusch Pascal, Krüger Jan Paul, Klein Kristy, Birkholz Axel, Leifeld JensORCID, Alewell Christine
Abstract
Abstract. For centuries European peatlands have been degrading along with
drainage, land use and climate changes. Increasing pressure on
peatland ecosystems calls for a more cost-efficient method to indicate
the current state of peatlands and the success of restoration
efforts. Metabolic pathways in peatland soils are imprinted in stable
isotope compositions due to differences in microorganism communities
and their metabolic pathways. Therefore, we hypothesize that depth
profiles of nitrogen stable isotope values provide a promising
opportunity to detect peatland decomposition or restoration. We
studied five peatlands, namely Degerö Stormyr (northern Sweden), Lakkasuo (central Finland) and three mires in the Black Forest (southern
Germany). At all locations, cores were taken from adjacent drained (or
rewetted) and natural sites to identify δ15N trends that
could indicate changes due to drainage and restoration. At all drained
(and rewetted) sites we found a distinct peak (“turning point”) of
the δ15N values in the center of the drained horizon. We
did a fatty acids (FAs) analysis to link our results to microbial
community composition. As markers, we distinguished between one
fungal-derived FA (C18:2ω9c) and four bacterial-derived
FAs. For bacteria, we looked for one general bacterial-derived FA
(C14:0), two FAs for gram-positive bacteria (i-C15:0; a-C15:0), and one
FA for gram-negative bacteria (C16:1ω9c). In accordance with
other studies, our results suggest that fungi dominate the microbial
metabolism in the upper aerobic peat horizon. This is reflected by
depleted δ15N values. Moving downwards, the drained horizon
conditions slowly switch to oxygen limitation. Consequently,
fungal-derived FAs decrease whereas bacterial-derived FAs rise. The
highest diversity of microbial-derived FAs is indicated by the
δ15N turning point. Below the δ15N turning point,
oxygen is increasingly limited and concentrations of all
microbial-derived FAs are decreasing down to the onset of the
permanently waterlogged anaerobic horizon. Peatland cores with
restoration successes again show, above the formerly drained horizon, no
depth trend of the isotopic values. Hence, we conclude that
δ15N stable isotope values reflect microbial community
composition, which differs between drained and natural peatlands.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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