Site-specific responses of fungal and bacterial abundances to experimental warming in litter and soil across Arctic and alpine tundra

Archive ouverte

Jeanbille, Mathilde | Clemmensen, Karina, E | Juhanson, Jaanis | Michelsen, Anders | Cooper, Elisabeth | Henry, Gregory H.R. | Hofgaard, Annika | Hollister, Robert | Jónsdóttir, Ingibjörg | Klanderud, Kari | Tolvanen, Anne | Hallin, Sara

Edité par CCSD ; NRC Research Press -

International audience. Vegetation change of the Arctic tundra due to global warming is a well-known process, but the implication for the belowground microbial communities, key in nutrient cycling and decomposition, is poorly understood. We characterized the fungal and bacterial abundances in litter and soil layers across 16 warming experimental sites at 12 circumpolar locations. We investigated the relationship between microbial abundances and nitrogen (N) and carbon (C) isotopic signatures, indicating shifts in microbial processes with warming. Microbial abundances were 2–3 orders of magnitude larger in litter than in soil. Local, site-dependent responses of microbial abundances were variable, and no general effect of warming was detected. The only generalizable trend across sites was a dependence between the warming response ratios and C:N ratio in controls, highlighting a legacy of the vegetation on the microbial response to warming. We detected a positive effect of warming on the litter mass and δ 15 N, which was linked to bacterial abundance under warmed conditions. This effect was stronger in experimental sites dominated by deciduous shrubs, suggesting an altered bacterial N-cycling with increased temperatures, mediated by the vegetation, and with possible consequences on ecosystem feedbacks to climate change.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Warming changes environmental dependencies of microbial communities and N cycling potential in litter across the tundra

Archive ouverte | Jeanbille, Mathilde | CCSD

International audience. The warming of the Arctic is changing tundra vegetation, with implications for plant litter properties. Climate warming may thus modify bacterial and fungal communities and microbial nitrogen...

BioTIME: A database of biodiversity time series for the Anthropocene

Archive ouverte | Dornelas, Maria | CCSD

International audience. Motivation: The BioTIME database contains raw data on species identities and abundances in ecological assemblages through time. These data enable users to calculate temporal trends in biodive...

Co-occurrence networks show response of microbial communities to warming in tundra soils

Archive ouverte | Jeanbille, Mathilde | CCSD

International audience. The arctic tundra is experiencing dramatic changes due to global warming. The directional changes in vegetation cover.is expected to impact the soil microbial communities, with consequences f...

Chargement des enrichissements...