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Microbial community responses reduce soil carbon loss in Tibetan alpine grasslands under short‐term warming
Authors:Yaoming Li  Wangwang Lv  Lili Jiang  Lirong Zhang  Shiping Wang  Qi Wang  Kai Xue  Bowen Li  Peipei Liu  Huan Hong  Wangmu Renzen  A Wang  Caiyun Luo  Zhenhua Zhang  Tsechoe Dorji  Neslihan Ta  Zhezhen Wang  Huakun Zhou  Yanfen Wang
Institution:Yaoming Li,Wangwang Lv,Lili Jiang,Lirong Zhang,Shiping Wang,Qi Wang,Kai Xue,Bowen Li,Peipei Liu,Huan Hong,Wangmu Renzen,A Wang,Caiyun Luo,Zhenhua Zhang,Tsechoe Dorji,Neslihan Ta?,Zhezhen Wang,Huakun Zhou,Yanfen Wang
Abstract:Changes in labile carbon (LC) pools and microbial communities are the primary factors controlling soil heterotrophic respiration (Rh) in warming experiments. Warming is expected to initially increase Rh but studies show this increase may not be continuous or sustained. Specifically, LC and soil microbiome have been shown to contribute to the effect of extended warming on Rh. However, their relative contribution is unclear and this gap in knowledge causes considerable uncertainty in the prediction of carbon cycle feedbacks to climate change. In this study, we used a two‐step incubation approach to reveal the relative contribution of LC limitation and soil microbial community responses in attenuating the effect that extended warming has on Rh. Soil samples from three Tibetan ecosystems—an alpine meadow (AM), alpine steppe (AS), and desert steppe (DS)—were exposed to a temperature gradient of 5–25°C. After an initial incubation period, soils were processed in one of two methods: (a) soils were sterilized then inoculated with parent soil microbes to assess the LC limitation effects, while controlling for microbial community responses; or (b) soil microbes from the incubations were used to inoculate sterilized parent soils to assess the microbial community effects, while controlling for LC limitation. We found both LC limitation and microbial community responses led to significant declines in Rh by 37% and 30%, respectively, but their relative contributions were ecosystem specific. LC limitation alone caused a greater Rh decrease for DS soils than AMs or ASs. Our study demonstrates that soil carbon loss due to Rh in Tibetan alpine soils—especially in copiotrophic soils—will be weakened by microbial community responses under short‐term warming.
Keywords:labile carbon limitation  microbial community response  soil heterotrophic respiration  soil incubation  soil respiration acclimation
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