Microbial Ecology, Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Microbial Biochemistry in Lund (MBLU), Department of Biology, Lund University, Lund, Sweden.
Glob Chang Biol. 2024 Jan;30(1):e17032. doi: 10.1111/gcb.17032. Epub 2023 Nov 24.
Climate change predictions suggest that arctic and subarctic ecosystems will be particularly affected by rising temperatures and extreme weather events, including severe heat waves. Temperature is one of the most important environmental factors controlling and regulating microbial decomposition in soils; therefore, it is critical to understand its impact on soil microorganisms and their feedback to climate warming. We conducted a warming experiment in a subarctic birch forest in North Sweden to test the effects of summer heat waves on the thermal trait distributions that define the temperature dependences for microbial growth and respiration. We also determined the microbial temperature dependences 10 and 12 months after the heat wave simulation had ended to investigate the persistence of the thermal trait shifts. As a result of warming, the bacterial growth temperature dependence shifted to become warm-adapted, with a similar trend for fungal growth. For respiration, there was no shift in the temperature dependence. The shifts in thermal traits were not accompanied by changes in α- or β-diversity of the microbial community. Warming increased the fungal-to-bacterial growth ratio by 33% and decreased the microbial carbon use efficiency by 35%, and both these effects were caused by the reduction in moisture the warming treatments caused, while there was no evidence that substrate depletion had altered microbial processes. The warm-shifted bacterial thermal traits were partially restored within one winter but only fully recovered to match ambient conditions after 1 year. To conclude, a summer heat wave in the Subarctic resulted in (i) shifts in microbial thermal trait distributions; (ii) lower microbial process rates caused by decreased moisture, not substrate depletion; and (iii) no detectable link between the microbial thermal trait shifts and community composition changes.
气候变化预测表明,北极和亚北极生态系统将特别受到气温上升和极端天气事件的影响,包括剧烈的热浪。温度是控制和调节土壤中微生物分解的最重要环境因素之一;因此,了解其对土壤微生物的影响及其对气候变暖的反馈至关重要。我们在瑞典北部的一个亚北极桦树林中进行了一项增温实验,以测试夏季热浪对微生物生长和呼吸的温度依赖性定义的热特性分布的影响。我们还在热浪模拟结束后 10 个月和 12 个月确定了微生物的温度依赖性,以调查热特性变化的持久性。由于变暖,细菌生长的温度依赖性向温暖适应转变,真菌生长也呈现出类似的趋势。对于呼吸作用,温度依赖性没有变化。热特性的变化并没有伴随着微生物群落的 α 多样性或β多样性的变化。增温增加了真菌与细菌生长的比率 33%,降低了微生物的碳利用效率 35%,这两种效应都是由增温处理导致的水分减少引起的,而没有证据表明基质消耗改变了微生物过程。温暖适应的细菌热特性在一个冬季内部分恢复,但仅在 1 年后才完全恢复到与环境条件相匹配的水平。总之,亚北极地区的夏季热浪导致:(i)微生物热特性分布的变化;(ii)由于水分减少而不是基质消耗导致的微生物过程速率降低;(iii)微生物热特性变化与群落组成变化之间没有可检测到的联系。