Leyrer Vinzent, Patulla Marina, Hartung Jens, Marhan Sven, Poll Christian
Soil Biology Department, Institute of Soil Science and Land Evaluation, University of Hohenheim, Germany.
Biostatistics Department, Institute of Crop Science, University of Hohenheim, Germany.
Glob Chang Biol. 2022 Jun;28(12):3974-3990. doi: 10.1111/gcb.16173. Epub 2022 Apr 8.
Climate is changing and predicted future scenarios include both changes in long-term mean climatic conditions and intensification of extreme events such as drought. Drought can have a major impact on soil functional processes; soil microorganisms, key to these processes, depend on water and temperature dynamics. Consequently, feedback mechanisms regarding microbially mediated carbon and nitrogen cycling in soils may be affected. There are indications that microbial exposure to increasingly unfavorable environmental conditions influences their stress responses. Here, the long-term field experiment Hohenheim Climate Change (HoCC) provided a research platform to explore how microbial exposure to long-term reduced water availability and soil warming modifies microbially driven soil processes, especially gas fluxes from soil, both during drought and after rewetting. The HoCC experiment is an agroecosystem in which the soil microbiome has been exposed to reduced annual mean precipitation and elevated temperature since 2008. Treatment levels were chosen based on a realistic future climate scenario. In June 2019, we exposed this system to a drought period of four weeks. We found that even after 11 years, warming remained a driver of CO and N O fluxes across the different soil moisture conditions in our drought experiment. Importantly, however, microbial exposure to long-term reduced water availability limited the stimulatory effect of warming on gas fluxes during drought and after rewetting. Our results were neither related to a legacy effect within overall microbial biomass carbon levels nor a shift towards enhanced fungal abundance. We found no indications that extracellular enzyme activities or microbial substrate availability explained the gas flux dynamics observed in our drought experiment. Our study indicates that soil warming promotes gaseous C and N loss even under extreme drought conditions. We suspect, however, that a shift in microbial function following long-term water limitation can hamper the enhancing effect of warming on soil gas fluxes.
气候正在变化,预计未来的情景包括长期平均气候条件的变化以及干旱等极端事件的加剧。干旱会对土壤功能过程产生重大影响;土壤微生物是这些过程的关键,它们依赖于水和温度动态。因此,土壤中微生物介导的碳和氮循环的反馈机制可能会受到影响。有迹象表明,微生物暴露于日益不利的环境条件会影响它们的应激反应。在这里,长期田间试验霍恩海姆气候变化试验(HoCC)提供了一个研究平台,以探索微生物在长期水分供应减少和土壤变暖的情况下,如何改变微生物驱动的土壤过程,特别是在干旱期间和再湿润后土壤中的气体通量。HoCC试验是一个农业生态系统,自2008年以来,土壤微生物群落一直暴露于年平均降水量减少和温度升高的环境中。处理水平是根据现实的未来气候情景选择的。2019年6月,我们使这个系统经历了为期四周的干旱期。我们发现,即使在11年后,在我们的干旱试验中,变暖仍然是不同土壤湿度条件下二氧化碳和一氧化二氮通量的驱动因素。然而,重要的是,微生物长期暴露于水分供应减少的环境中,限制了变暖对干旱期间和再湿润后气体通量的刺激作用。我们的结果既与总体微生物生物量碳水平内的遗留效应无关,也与真菌丰度增加的转变无关。我们没有发现细胞外酶活性或微生物底物可用性能够解释我们干旱试验中观察到的气体通量动态的迹象。我们的研究表明,即使在极端干旱条件下,土壤变暖也会促进气态碳和氮的损失。然而,我们怀疑长期水分限制后微生物功能的转变会阻碍变暖对土壤气体通量的增强作用。