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Soil warming alters microbial substrate use in alpine soils
Authors:Kathrin Streit  Frank Hagedorn  David Hiltbrunner  Magdalena Portmann  Matthias Saurer  Nina Buchmann  Birgit Wild  Andreas Richter  Sonja Wipf  Rolf T W Siegwolf
Institution:1. Paul Scherrer Institute (PSI), Laboratory of Atmospheric Chemistry, , Villigen PSI, 5232 Switzerland;2. Forest Soils and Biogeochemistry, Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL), , Birmensdorf, 8903 Switzerland;3. Nova Energie Basel AG, , Basel, 4058 Switzerland;4. Institute of Agricultural Sciences, ETH Zürich, , Zürich, 8092 Switzerland;5. Division of Terrestrial Ecosystem Research, Department of Microbiology and Ecosystem Science, University of Vienna, , Vienna, 1090 Austria;6. Community Ecology, Mountain Ecosystems, WSL Institute for Snow and Avalanche Research (SLF), , Davos Dorf, CH‐7260 Switzerland
Abstract:Will warming lead to an increased use of older soil organic carbon (SOC) by microbial communities, thereby inducing C losses from C‐rich alpine soils? We studied soil microbial community composition, activity, and substrate use after 3 and 4 years of soil warming (+4 °C, 2007–2010) at the alpine treeline in Switzerland. The warming experiment was nested in a free air CO2 enrichment experiment using depleted 13CO213C = ?30‰, 2001–2009). We traced this depleted 13C label in phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) of the organic layer (0–5 cm soil depth) and in C mineralized from root‐free soils to distinguish substrate ages used by soil microorganisms: fixed before 2001 (‘old’), from 2001 to 2009 (‘new’) or in 2010 (‘recent’). Warming induced a sustained stimulation of soil respiration (+38%) without decline in mineralizable SOC. PLFA concentrations did not reveal changes in microbial community composition due to soil warming, but soil microbial metabolic activity was stimulated (+66%). Warming decreased the amount of new and recent C in the fungal biomarker 18:2ω6,9 and the amount of new C mineralized from root‐free soils, implying a shift in microbial substrate use toward a greater use of old SOC. This shift in substrate use could indicate an imbalance between C inputs and outputs, which could eventually decrease SOC storage in this alpine ecosystem.
Keywords:continuous 13C labeling  free air CO2 enrichment (FACE)  fungi  gram negative bacteria  gram positive bacteria     Larix decidua     phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA)     Pinus mugo     soil warming
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