Biogeochemical plant-soil microbe feedback in response to climate warming in peatlands

被引:0
|
作者
Bragazza L. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Parisod J. [1 ,2 ]
Buttler A. [1 ,2 ,4 ]
Bardgett R.D. [5 ]
机构
[1] WSL Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research, Site Lausanne, Station 2
[2] École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), School of Architecture, Civil and Environmental Engineering (ENAC), Laboratory of Ecological Systems (ECOS), Station 2
[3] University of Ferrara, Department of Life Science and Biotechnologies, Corso Ercole I d'Este 32
[4] Laboratoire de Chrono-Environnement, UMR 6249 CNRS-INRA, Université de Franche-Comté
[5] Soil and Ecosystem Ecology Laboratory, Lancaster Environment Centre, Lancaster University
关键词
D O I
10.1038/nclimate1781
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Peatlands act as global sinks of atmospheric carbon (C) through the accumulation of organic matter1, primarily made up of decay-resistant litter of peat mosses2. However, climate warming has been shown to promote vascular plant growth in peatlands, especially ericaceous shrubs 3. A change in vegetation cover is in turn expected to modify above-ground/below-ground interactions4, but the biogeochemical mechanisms involved remain unknown. Here, by selecting peatlands at different altitudes to simulate a natural gradient of soil temperature, we show that the expansion of ericaceous shrubs with warming is associated with an increase of polyphenol content in both plant litter and pore water. In turn, this retards the release of nitrogen (N) from decomposing litter, increases the amount of dissolved organic N and reduces N immobilization by soil microbes. A decrease of soil water content with increasing temperature promotes the growth of fungi, which feeds back positively on ericaceous shrubs by facilitating the symbiotic acquisition of dissolved organic N. We also observed a higher release of labile C from vascular plant roots at higher soil temperatures, which promotes the microbial investment in C-degrading enzymes. Our data suggest that climate-induced changes in plant cover can reduce the productivity of peat mosses and potentially prime the decomposition of organic matter by affecting the stoichiometry of soil enzymatic activity. Copyright © 2013 Macmillan Publishers Limited.
引用
收藏
页码:273 / 277
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Biogeochemical plant-soil microbe feedback in response to climate warming in peatlands
    Bragazza, Luca
    Parisod, Julien
    Buttler, Alexandre
    Bardgett, Richard D.
    NATURE CLIMATE CHANGE, 2013, 3 (03) : 273 - 277
  • [2] Microbe-mediated plant-soil feedback and its roles in a changing world
    Miki, Takeshi
    ECOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2012, 27 (03) : 509 - 520
  • [3] Climate warming intensifies plant-soil causal relationships in a coastal wetland
    Sun, Baoyu
    Ping, Jiaye
    Jiang, Ming
    Xia, Jianyang
    Xia, Fanyu
    Han, Guangxuan
    Yan, Liming
    JOURNAL OF PLANT ECOLOGY, 2025, 18 (01)
  • [4] Feedback in the plant-soil system
    Ehrenfeld, JG
    Ravit, B
    Elgersma, K
    ANNUAL REVIEW OF ENVIRONMENT AND RESOURCES, 2005, 30 : 75 - 115
  • [5] The Temporal Dimension of Plant-Soil Microbe Interactions: Mechanisms Promoting Feedback between Generations
    Ke, Po-Ju
    Levine, Jonathan M.
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2021, 198 (03): : E80 - E94
  • [6] Microbe-mediated plant-soil feedback causes historical contingency effects in plant community assembly
    Kardol, Paul
    Cornips, Nelleke J.
    van Kempen, Monique M. L.
    Bakx-Schotman, J. M. Tanja
    van der Putten, Wim H.
    ECOLOGICAL MONOGRAPHS, 2007, 77 (02) : 147 - 162
  • [7] Plant-soil feedback and the maintenance of diversity in Mediterranean-climate shrublands
    Teste, Francois P.
    Kardol, Paul
    Turner, Benjamin L.
    Wardle, David A.
    Zemunik, Graham
    Renton, Michael
    Laliberte, Etienne
    SCIENCE, 2017, 355 (6321) : 173 - +
  • [8] Global patterns and drivers of plant-soil microbe interactions
    Jiang, Feng
    Bennett, Jonathan A.
    Crawford, Kerri M.
    Heinze, Johannes
    Pu, Xucai
    Luo, Ao
    Wang, Zhiheng
    ECOLOGY LETTERS, 2024, 27 (01)
  • [9] Climate warming masks the negative effect of microplastics on plant-soil health in a silt loam soil
    Nayab, Gull
    Zhou, Jie
    Jia, Rong
    Lv, Yihan
    Yang, Yadong
    Brown, Robert W.
    Zang, Huadong
    Jones, Davey L.
    Zeng, Zhaohai
    GEODERMA, 2022, 425
  • [10] Plant-soil feedback: the next generation
    G. Kenny Png
    Jonathan R. De Long
    Ellen L. Fry
    Robin Heinen
    Johannes Heinze
    Elly Morriën
    Sarah J. Sapsford
    François P. Teste
    Plant and Soil, 2023, 485 : 1 - 5