Soil profile connectivity can impact microbial substrate use, affecting how soil CO<sub>2</sub> effluxes are controlled by temperature
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Published:2021-08-20
Issue:16
Volume:18
Page:4755-4772
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ISSN:1726-4189
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Container-title:Biogeosciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Biogeosciences
Author:
Podrebarac Frances A., Billings Sharon A.ORCID, Edwards Kate A., Laganière Jérôme, Norwood Matthew J., Ziegler Susan E.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Determining controls on the temperature sensitivity of
heterotrophic soil respiration remains critical to incorporating
soil–climate feedbacks into climate models. Most information on soil
respiratory responses to temperature comes from laboratory incubations of
isolated soils and typically subsamples of individual horizons.
Inconsistencies between field and laboratory results may be explained by
microbial priming supported by cross-horizon exchange of labile C or N. Such
exchange is feasible in intact soil profiles but is absent when soils are
isolated from surrounding depths. Here we assess the role of soil horizon
connectivity, by which we mean the degree to which horizons remain layered
and associated with each other as they are in situ, on microbial C and N substrate
use and its relationship to the temperature sensitivity of respiration. We
accomplished this by exploring changes in C : N, soil organic matter
composition (via C : N, amino acid composition and concentration, and nuclear
magnetic resonance spectroscopy), and the δ13C of respiratory
CO2 during incubations of organic horizons collected across boreal
forests in different climate regions where soil C and N compositions differ.
The experiments consisted of two treatments: soil incubated (1) with each
organic horizon separately and (2) as a whole organic profile, permitting
cross-horizon exchange of substrates during the incubation. The soils were
incubated at 5 and 15 ∘C for over 430 d. Enhanced
microbial use of labile C-rich, but not N-rich, substrates were responsible
for enhanced, whole-horizon respiratory responses to temperature relative to
individual soil horizons. This impact of a labile C priming mechanism was
most emergent in soils from the warmer region, consistent with these soils'
lower C bioreactivity relative to soils from the colder region.
Specifically, cross-horizon exchange within whole soil profiles prompted
increases in mineralization of carbohydrates and more 13C-enriched
substrates and increased soil respiratory responses to warming relative to
soil horizons incubated in isolation. These findings highlight that soil
horizon connectivity can impact microbial substrate use in ways that affect
how soil effluxes of CO2 are controlled by temperature. The degree to
which this mechanism exerts itself in other soils remains unknown, but these
results highlight the importance of understanding mechanisms that operate in
intact soil profiles – only rarely studied – in regulating a key
soil–climate feedback.
Funder
Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Natural Resources Canada
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
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