Multiple Climate Change Factors Interact to Alter Soil Microbial Community Structure in an Old-Field Ecosystem

被引:81
|
作者
Gray, Sharon B. [1 ,2 ]
Classen, Aimee T. [3 ]
Kardol, Paul [4 ]
Yermakov, Zhanna [1 ]
Miller, R. Michael [1 ]
机构
[1] Argonne Natl Lab, Biosci Div E 161, Argonne, IL 60439 USA
[2] Univ Illinois, Inst Genom Biol, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[3] Univ Tennessee, Dep Ecol & Evolutionary Biol, Knoxville, TN 37996 USA
[4] Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Dep Forest Ecol & Management, S-90183 Umea, Sweden
关键词
PLANT-SPECIES RICHNESS; METHYL-ESTER PROFILES; ELEVATED CO2; ATMOSPHERIC CO2; FATTY-ACIDS; MYCORRHIZAL FUNGI; CARBON-DIOXIDE; GLOBAL CHANGE; TEMPERATURE; RESPONSES;
D O I
10.2136/sssaj2011.0135
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Climate change has the potential to alter both the composition and function of a soil's microbial community, and interactions among climate change factors may alter soil communities in ways that are not possible to predict from experiments based on a single factor. This study evaluated the direct and interactive effects of three climate change factors-elevated CO2, altered amounts of precipitation, and elevated air temperature-on soil microbial communities from an old-field climate change experiment being conducted at Oak Ridge, TN. Soil microbial community composition and biomass were determined by phospholipid fatty acid (PLFA) and neutral lipid fatty acid composition. We found that the interactive effects of precipitation and temperature treatments, as well as the interactive effects of precipitation and CO2 treatments, had significant impacts on microbial community composition. We found that total soil PLFA concentration, a measure of microbial biomass, was greater in the low-precipitation treatments, especially when low precipitation was combined with ambient CO2 concentrations or ambient temperature. Ordination analysis indicated that temperature was the most significant predictor of shifts in the soil microbial community composition, explaining approximately 12% of the variance in relative abundance of PLFA biomarkers. The elevated-temperature treatment increased the abundance of Firmicutes (low-guanine-cytosine Gram positive) and decreased the abundance of Gram-negative bacteria. Elevated temperature also reduced the abundance of the arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi PLFA biomarker 16:1 omega 5c and saprophytic fungal PLFA biomarker 18: 2 omega 6,9. Overall, our data indicate that the interactions among climate change factors alter the composition of soil microbial communities in old-field ecosystems, suggesting potential for changes in microbial community function under predicted future climate conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:2217 / 2226
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Climate change effects on plant biomass alter dominance patterns and community evenness in an experimental old-field ecosystem
    Kardol, Paul
    Campany, Courtney E.
    Souza, Lara
    Norby, Richard J.
    Weltzin, Jake F.
    Classen, Aimee T.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2010, 16 (10) : 2676 - 2687
  • [2] Climate Change Alters Seedling Emergence and Establishment in an Old-Field Ecosystem
    Classen, Aimee T.
    Norby, Richard J.
    Campany, Courtney E.
    Sides, Katherine E.
    Weltzin, Jake F.
    PLOS ONE, 2010, 5 (10):
  • [3] Small mammal activity alters plant community composition and microbial activity in an old-field ecosystem
    Moorhead, Leigh C.
    Souza, Lara
    Habeck, Christopher W.
    Lindroth, Richard L.
    Classen, Aimee T.
    ECOSPHERE, 2017, 8 (05):
  • [4] STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF AN OLD-FIELD BROOMSEDGE COMMUNITY
    GOLLEY, FB
    ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 1965, 35 (01) : 113 - &
  • [5] COMMUNITY AND POPULATION LEVEL RESPONSES TO FERTILIZATION IN AN OLD-FIELD ECOSYSTEM
    BAKELAAR, RG
    ODUM, EP
    ECOLOGY, 1978, 59 (04) : 660 - 665
  • [6] Fifteen years of climate change manipulations alter soil microbial communities in a subarctic heath ecosystem
    Rinnan, Riikka
    Michelsen, Anders
    Baath, Erland
    Jonasson, Sven
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2007, 13 (01) : 28 - 39
  • [7] Differential effects of two dominant plant species on community structure and invasibility in an old-field ecosystem
    Souza, Lara
    Weltzin, Jake F.
    Sanders, Nathan J.
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2011, 4 (03) : 123 - 131
  • [8] Elevated air temperature alters an old-field insect community in a multifactor climate change experiment
    Villalpando, Shawn N.
    Williams, Ray S.
    Norby, Richard J.
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2009, 15 (04) : 930 - 942
  • [9] Soil Microbial Community Responses to Multiple Experimental Climate Change Drivers
    Castro, Hector F.
    Classen, Aimee T.
    Austin, Emily E.
    Norby, Richard J.
    Schadt, Christopher W.
    APPLIED AND ENVIRONMENTAL MICROBIOLOGY, 2010, 76 (04) : 999 - 1007
  • [10] Polyethylene microplastics alter soil microbial community assembly and ecosystem multifunctionality
    Liu, Ziqiang
    Wen, Jiahao
    Liu, Zhenxiu
    Wei, Hui
    Zhang, Jiaen
    ENVIRONMENT INTERNATIONAL, 2024, 183