Beattie Gwyn A, Edlund Anna, Esiobu Nwadiuto, Gilbert Jack, Nicolaisen Mette Haubjerg, Jansson Janet K, Jensen Paul, Keiluweit Marco, Lennon Jay T, Martiny Jennifer, Minnis Vanessa R, Newman Dianne, Peixoto Raquel, Schadt Christopher, van der Meer Jan Roelof
Department of Plant Pathology, Entomology and Microbiology, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa, USA.
Oath Inc., Mill Valley, California, USA.
mSystems. 2025 Jan 21;10(1):e0112924. doi: 10.1128/msystems.01129-24. Epub 2024 Dec 18.
Mitigating climate change in soil ecosystems involves complex plant and microbial processes regulating carbon pools and flows. Here, we advocate for the use of soil microbiome interventions to help increase soil carbon stocks and curb greenhouse gas emissions from managed soils. Direct interventions include the introduction of microbial strains, consortia, phage, and soil transplants, whereas indirect interventions include managing soil conditions or additives to modulate community composition or its activities. Approaches to increase soil carbon stocks using microbially catalyzed processes include increasing carbon inputs from plants, promoting soil organic matter (SOM) formation, and reducing SOM turnover and production of diverse greenhouse gases. Marginal or degraded soils may provide the greatest opportunities for enhancing global soil carbon stocks. Among the many knowledge gaps in this field, crucial gaps include the processes influencing the transformation of plant-derived soil carbon inputs into SOM and the identity of the microbes and microbial activities impacting this transformation. As a critical step forward, we encourage broadening the current widespread screening of potentially beneficial soil microorganisms to encompass functions relevant to stimulating soil carbon stocks. Moreover, in developing these interventions, we must consider the potential ecological ramifications and uncertainties, such as incurred by the widespread introduction of homogenous inoculants and consortia, and the need for site-specificity given the extreme variation among soil habitats. Incentivization and implementation at large spatial scales could effectively harness increases in soil carbon stocks, helping to mitigate the impacts of climate change.
缓解土壤生态系统中的气候变化涉及调节碳库和碳流的复杂植物和微生物过程。在此,我们主张利用土壤微生物群落干预措施来帮助增加土壤碳储量,并抑制管理土壤中的温室气体排放。直接干预措施包括引入微生物菌株、菌群、噬菌体和土壤移植,而间接干预措施包括管理土壤条件或添加物以调节群落组成或其活动。利用微生物催化过程增加土壤碳储量的方法包括增加植物的碳输入、促进土壤有机质(SOM)的形成,以及减少SOM周转和多种温室气体的产生。边际土壤或退化土壤可能为增加全球土壤碳储量提供最大机会。在该领域众多的知识空白中,关键空白包括影响植物源土壤碳输入转化为SOM的过程,以及影响这种转化的微生物及其活动的特性。作为向前迈出的关键一步,我们鼓励扩大目前对潜在有益土壤微生物的广泛筛选,使其涵盖与刺激土壤碳储量相关的功能。此外,在开发这些干预措施时,我们必须考虑潜在的生态影响和不确定性,例如同质接种剂和菌群的广泛引入所带来的影响,以及鉴于土壤生境之间的极端差异而需要因地制宜。在大空间尺度上进行激励和实施可以有效利用土壤碳储量的增加,有助于减轻气候变化的影响。