Yu Yingchao, Liu Shuang, Pan Junxiao, Zhu Juntao, Zong Ning, Zhang Xinyuan, Wu Honghui, An Hui, Diao Huajie, Zuo Xiaoan, Wei Cunzheng, Zhang Fawei, Yu Qiang, Zhang Xinyu
Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
College of Resources and Environment, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China.
Glob Chang Biol. 2025 Jul;31(7):e70353. doi: 10.1111/gcb.70353.
Soil microbial residue carbon (MRC) represents a significant component of soil carbon pools and regulates the response of soil carbon sequestration to precipitation changes. However, the response of soil MRC to extreme drought and wetness and the underlying mechanisms in regional grassland ecosystems remain unclear. Here, we quantified the responses of soil MRC content to extreme drought and wetness and identified the key drivers using a coordinated precipitation change experiment across nine alpine and temperate grassland ecosystems in China. Extreme drought (-50% precipitation) reduced MRC content by 8% on average. In contrast, extreme wetness (+50% precipitation) unexpectedly caused a pronounced 24% average decline in MRC content. Under extreme drought, reduced plant biomass inhibited soil MRC formation, and soil microbial N enzyme activity accelerated soil MRC decomposition. Moreover, wetter ecosystems exhibited greater losses of soil MRC, whereas drier ecosystems experienced a smaller decline. Under extreme wetness, increased soil microbial N enzyme activity accelerated the decomposition and utilization of microbial residue due to intensified microbial nitrogen limitation, resulting in a reduction in MRC. Our findings challenged the conventional understanding that extreme wetness promotes MRC accumulation by revealing a stronger reduction in MRC content under extreme wetness than under extreme drought. By uncovering distinct mechanisms driving MRC responses to extreme drought and wetness, our study provides critical insights into the dynamics of microbial-derived carbon in grassland ecosystems under future climate change.
土壤微生物残体碳(MRC)是土壤碳库的重要组成部分,调控着土壤碳固存对降水变化的响应。然而,区域草地生态系统中土壤MRC对极端干旱和湿润的响应及其潜在机制仍不清楚。在此,我们通过在中国9个高寒和温带草地生态系统开展的协同降水变化实验,量化了土壤MRC含量对极端干旱和湿润的响应,并确定了关键驱动因素。极端干旱(降水减少50%)使MRC含量平均降低了8%。相反,极端湿润(降水增加50%)意外地导致MRC含量平均显著下降了24%。在极端干旱条件下,植物生物量减少抑制了土壤MRC的形成,而土壤微生物N酶活性加速了土壤MRC的分解。此外,较湿润的生态系统土壤MRC损失更大,而较干旱的生态系统下降幅度较小。在极端湿润条件下,由于微生物氮限制加剧,土壤微生物N酶活性增加加速了微生物残体的分解和利用,导致MRC减少。我们的研究结果挑战了传统观念,即极端湿润促进MRC积累,因为研究发现极端湿润条件下MRC含量的减少比极端干旱条件下更强。通过揭示驱动MRC对极端干旱和湿润响应的不同机制,我们的研究为未来气候变化下草地生态系统中微生物源碳的动态变化提供了关键见解。