College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Key Laboratory of Plant-Soil Interactions, Ministry of Education, National Academy of Agriculture Green Development, China Agricultural University, Beijing, PR China.
Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Beijing, PR China.
Glob Chang Biol. 2021 May;27(10):2011-2028. doi: 10.1111/gcb.15538. Epub 2021 Feb 13.
Current consensus on global climate change predicts warming trends with more pronounced temperature changes in winter than summer in the Northern Hemisphere at high latitudes. Moderate increases in soil temperature are generally related to faster rates of soil organic carbon (SOC) decomposition in Northern ecosystems, but there is evidence that SOC stocks have remained remarkably stable or even increased on the Tibetan Plateau under these conditions. This intriguing observation points to altered soil microbial mediation of carbon-cycling feedbacks in this region that might be related to seasonal warming. This study investigated the unexplained SOC stabilization observed on the Tibetan Plateau by quantifying microbial responses to experimental seasonal warming in a typical alpine meadow. Ecosystem respiration was reduced by 17%-38% under winter warming compared with year-round warming or no warming and coincided with decreased abundances of fungi and functional genes that control labile and stable organic carbon decomposition. Compared with year-round warming, winter warming slowed macroaggregate turnover rates by 1.6 times, increased fine intra-aggregate particulate organic matter content by 75%, and increased carbon stabilized in microaggregates within stable macroaggregates by 56%. Larger bacterial "necromass" (amino sugars) concentrations in soil under winter warming coincided with a 12% increase in carboxyl-C. These results indicate the enhanced physical preservation of SOC under winter warming and emphasize the role of soil microorganisms in aggregate life cycles. In summary, the divergent responses of SOC persistence in soils exposed to winter warming compared to year-round warming are explained by the slowing of microbial decomposition but increasing physical protection of microbially derived organic compounds. Consequently, the soil microbial response to winter warming on the Tibetan Plateau may cause negative feedbacks to global climate change and should be considered in Earth system models.
当前关于全球气候变化的共识预测,在高纬度的北半球,冬季的变暖趋势比夏季更为明显。土壤温度的适度升高通常与北方生态系统中土壤有机碳 (SOC) 分解的更快速率有关,但有证据表明,在这些条件下,青藏高原的 SOC 储量保持着惊人的稳定,甚至有所增加。这一有趣的观察结果表明,该地区土壤微生物对碳循环反馈的调节发生了变化,这可能与季节性变暖有关。本研究通过量化微生物对典型高山草甸季节性变暖的响应,调查了青藏高原上观察到的 SOC 稳定现象,该现象尚未得到解释。与全年变暖或无变暖相比,冬季变暖使生态系统呼吸减少了 17%-38%,这与真菌和控制不稳定和稳定有机碳分解的功能基因丰度下降有关。与全年变暖相比,冬季变暖使大团聚体的周转率降低了 1.6 倍,细团聚体内的颗粒有机物质含量增加了 75%,稳定大团聚体内的微团聚体中稳定的碳增加了 56%。冬季变暖使土壤中的细菌“尸体”(氨基糖)浓度增加了 12%,同时羧基 C 增加了 12%。这些结果表明,冬季变暖增强了 SOC 的物理保护,强调了土壤微生物在团聚体生命周期中的作用。总之,与全年变暖相比,冬季变暖对 SOC 持久性的不同响应可以通过微生物分解的减缓但微生物衍生有机化合物的物理保护增加来解释。因此,青藏高原土壤微生物对冬季变暖的响应可能会对全球气候变化产生负反馈,应在地球系统模型中加以考虑。