Shakoor Awais, Pendall Elise, Macdonald Catriona A
Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, 2571, Australia.
Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, Penrith, New South Wales, 2571, Australia.
J Environ Manage. 2025 Mar;376:124380. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2025.124380. Epub 2025 Feb 15.
Soils represent both a source of and sink for greenhouse gases (GHG). Elevated temperature (eT) affects both the physical and biological factors that drive GHG emissions from soil and thus understanding the effects of rising global temperatures on terrestrial GHG emission is needed to predict future GHG emissions, and to identify mitigation strategies. However, uncertainty remains about the interactive effects of multiple climate factors across different ecosystems, complicating our ability to develop robust climate change projections. Therefore, a global meta-analysis of 1337 pairwise observations from 150 peer-reviewed publications (1990-2023) was conducted to assess the individual effect of eT and its combined effects with eCO (eT + eCO), drought (eT + drought) and increased precipitation (eT + ePPT) on soil NO and CH fluxes, microbial functional genes, and soil extracellular enzyme activities across grassland, cropland, and forestland ecosystems. Across the dataset, eT significantly increased NO emissions (21%) and CH uptake (36%). Nitrogen cycling was consistently stimulated by eT, with NO and NH and the abundance of amoA-AOB gene increasing by 6%, 10%, and 18%, respectively. Soil water content (SWC) was reduced, whereas increases of 9% in soil organic carbon (SOC), 14% in microbial biomass carbon (MBC), and 10% in total plant biomass were found under eT. The stimulation of soil NO emissions by eT was maintained for all ecosystems when combined with other global change factors (ie., eT + eCO, eT + ePPT, and eT + drought). By contrast, effects of eT on CH uptake and emissions were more variable when combined with other factors; for instance, eT + eCO and eT + ePPT suppressed CH uptake in grasslands. This study highlights the urgent need to study the microbial mechanisms responsible for combined global change effects on NO and especially CH fluxes.
土壤既是温室气体的源,也是其汇。温度升高(eT)会影响驱动土壤温室气体排放的物理和生物因素,因此,需要了解全球气温上升对陆地温室气体排放的影响,以预测未来的温室气体排放,并确定缓解策略。然而,不同生态系统中多种气候因素的交互作用仍存在不确定性,这使得我们难以做出可靠的气候变化预测。因此,我们对150篇同行评议出版物(1990 - 2023年)中的1337个成对观测数据进行了全球荟萃分析,以评估温度升高(eT)及其与升高的二氧化碳浓度(eT + eCO)、干旱(eT + 干旱)和降水增加(eT + ePPT)的联合效应,对草地、农田和林地生态系统中土壤一氧化氮(NO)和甲烷(CH)通量、微生物功能基因以及土壤胞外酶活性的影响。在整个数据集中,温度升高显著增加了一氧化氮排放(21%)和甲烷吸收(36%)。温度升高持续刺激氮循环,一氧化氮、铵(NH)以及氨氧化细菌(AOB)的amoA基因丰度分别增加了6%、10%和18%。土壤含水量(SWC)降低,而在温度升高的情况下,土壤有机碳(SOC)增加了9%,微生物生物量碳(MBC)增加了14%,植物总生物量增加了10%。当温度升高与其他全球变化因素(即eT + eCO、eT + ePPT和eT + 干旱)结合时,其对所有生态系统土壤一氧化氮排放的刺激作用依然存在。相比之下,温度升高与其他因素结合时,对甲烷吸收和排放的影响更具变异性;例如,eT + eCO和eT + ePPT抑制了草地中的甲烷吸收。本研究强调迫切需要研究微生物机制,以解释全球变化对一氧化氮,尤其是对甲烷通量的联合影响。