Responses of soil microbes and enzymes to long-term warming incubation in different depths of permafrost peatland soil
第一作者: |
Song, Yanyu |
英文第一作者: |
Song, Yanyu |
联系作者: |
Sun, Li;Song, Changchun |
英文联系作者: |
Sun, Li;Song, Changchun |
发表年度: |
2023 |
卷: |
900 |
摘要: |
Soil microbes and enzymes mediate soil carbon-climate feedback, and their responses to increasing temperature partly affect soil carbon stability subjected to the effects of climate change. We performed a 50-month incubation experiment to determine the effect of long-term warming on soil microbes and enzymes involved in carbon cycling along permafrost peatland profile (0-150 cm) and investigated their response to water flooding in the active soil layer. Soil bacteria, fungi, and most enzymes were observed to be sensitive to changes in temperature and water in the permafrost peatland. Bacterial and fungal abundance decreased in the active layer soil but increased in the deepest permafrost layer under warming. The highest decrease in the ratio of soil bacteria to fungi was observed in the deepest permafrost layer under warming. These results indicated that long-term warming promotes recalcitrant carbon loss in permafrost because fungi are more efficient in decomposing high-molecular-weight compounds. Soil microbial catabolic activity measured using Biolog Ecoplates indicated a greater degree of average well color development at 15 degrees C than at 5 degrees C. The highest levels of microbial catabolic activity, functional diversity, and carbon substrate utilization were found in the permafrost boundary layer (60-80 cm). Soil polyphenol oxidase that degrades recalcitrant carbon was more sensitive to increases in temperature than 13-glucosidase, N-acetyl-13-glucosaminidase, and acid phosphatase, which degrade labile carbon. Increasing temperature and water flooding exerted a synergistic effect on the bacterial and fungal abundance and 13-glucosidase, acid phosphatase, and RubisCO activity in the topsoil. Structural equation modeling analysis indicated that soil enzyme activity significantly correlated with ratio of soil bacteria to fungi and microbial catabolic activity. Our results provide valuable insights into the linkage response of soil microorganisms, enzymes to climate change and their feedback to permafrost carbon loss. |
刊物名称: |
SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT |
参与作者: |
Song, Yanyu; Sun, Li; Song, Changchun; Li, Mengting; Liu, Zhendi; Zhu, Mengyuan; Chen, Shuang; Yuan, Jiabao; Gao, Jinli; Wang, Xianwei; Wang, Wenjuan |