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Summer warming accelerates sub‐arctic peatland nitrogen cycling without changing enzyme pools or microbial community structure
Authors:James T Weedon  George A Kowalchuk  Rien Aerts  Jurgen van Hal  Richard van Logtestijn  Neslihan Ta?  Wilfred F M Röling  Peter M van Bodegom
Institution:1. Department of Systems Ecology, Institute of Ecological Science, VU University Amsterdam, , 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Department of Microbial Ecology, Netherlands Institute of Ecology (NIOO‐KNAW), , 6708 PB Wageningen, The Netherlands;3. Department of Molecular Cell Physiology, VU University Amsterdam, , 1081 HV Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Abstract:The balance of primary production and decomposition in northern peatlands may shift due to climate change, with potential feedbacks to atmospheric CO2 concentrations. Nitrogen availability will modulate this shift, but little is known about the drivers of soil nitrogen dynamics in these environments. We used a long‐term (9 years) open top chamber (OTC) experiment in an ombrotrophic Sphagnum peat bog in sub‐arctic Sweden, to test for the interactive effects of spring warming, summer warming and winter snow addition on soil nitrogen fluxes, potential activities of nitrogen cycle enzymes, and soil microbial community composition. These simultaneous measurements allowed us to identify the level of organization at which climate change impacts are apparent, an important requirement for developing truly mechanistic understanding. Organic‐N pools and fluxes were an order of magnitude higher than inorganic‐N pools and fluxes. Summer warming approximately doubled fluxes of soil organic nitrogen and ammonia over the growing season. Such a large increase under 1 °C warming is unlikely to be due to kinetic effects, and we propose that it is linked to an observed seasonal decrease in microbial biomass, suggesting that N flux is driven by a substantial late‐season dieback of microbes. This change in N cycle dynamics was not reflected in any of the measured potential peptidase activities. Moreover, the soil microbial community structure was apparently stable across treatments, suggesting a non‐specific microbial dieback. Our results show that in these widespread peat bogs, where many plant species are capable of organic‐N uptake, organic soil N dynamics are quantitatively far more important than the commonly studied inorganic‐N dynamics. Understanding of climate change effects on organic soil N cycling in this system will be advanced by closer investigation of the seasonal dynamics of the microbial biomass and the input of substrates that maintain it.
Keywords:climate change  denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis  microbial community  nitrogen cycling  peatlands  peptidase enzymes  quantitative polymerase chain reaction
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