GFZ German Research Center for Geosciences, Section Geomicrobiology, Potsdam, Germany.
Cyrosphere Research Station on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, State Key Laboratory of Cryospheric Sciences, Northwest Institute of Eco-Environment and Resources, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou, China.
Mol Ecol. 2021 Oct;30(20):5094-5104. doi: 10.1111/mec.16118. Epub 2021 Aug 24.
Temperature is an important factor governing microbe-mediated carbon feedback from permafrost soils. The link between taxonomic and functional microbial responses to temperature change remains elusive due to the lack of studies assessing both aspects of microbial ecology. Our previous study reported microbial metabolic and trophic shifts in response to short-term temperature increases in Arctic peat soil, and linked these shifts to higher CH and CO production rates (Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 112, E2507-E2516). Here, we studied the taxonomic composition and functional potential of samples from the same experiment. We see that along a high-resolution temperature gradient (1-30°C), microbial communities change discretely, but not continuously or stochastically, in response to rising temperatures. The taxonomic variability may thus in part reflect the varied temperature responses of individual taxa and the competition between these taxa for resources. These taxonomic responses contrast the stable functional potential (metagenomic-based) across all temperatures or the previously observed metabolic or trophic shifts at key temperatures. Furthermore, with rising temperatures we observed a progressive decrease in species diversity (Shannon Index) and increased dispersion of greenhouse gas (GHG) production rates. We conclude that the taxonomic variation is decoupled from both the functional potential of the community and the previously observed temperature-dependent changes in microbial function. However, the reduced diversity at higher temperatures might help explain the higher variability in GHG production at higher temperatures.
温度是控制永久冻土土壤中微生物介导的碳反馈的重要因素。由于缺乏同时评估微生物生态学两个方面的研究,因此-taxonomic 和功能微生物对温度变化的响应之间的联系仍然难以捉摸。我们之前的研究报告了在北极泥炭土壤中短期温度升高时微生物代谢和营养转移的变化,并将这些变化与更高的 CH 和 CO 产生速率联系起来(美国国家科学院院刊,112,E2507-E2516)。在这里,我们研究了来自同一实验的样本的分类组成和功能潜力。我们发现,沿着高分辨率的温度梯度(1-30°C),微生物群落离散地变化,但不是连续或随机地响应温度升高。因此,分类变化部分可能反映了个别分类单元的不同温度响应以及这些分类单元对资源的竞争。这些分类响应与所有温度下稳定的功能潜力(基于宏基因组学)或以前在关键温度下观察到的代谢或营养转移形成对比。此外,随着温度的升高,我们观察到物种多样性(香农指数)逐渐减少,温室气体(GHG)产生速率的分散度增加。我们得出结论,分类变化与群落的功能潜力以及以前观察到的微生物功能随温度变化的情况脱钩。然而,较高温度下的多样性减少可能有助于解释较高温度下 GHG 产生的更高变异性。