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Relating microbial community structure to functioning in forest soil organic carbon transformation and turnover
Authors:Yeming You  Juan Wang  Xueman Huang  Zuoxin Tang  Shirong Liu  Osbert J Sun
Institution:1. Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Silviculture and Conservation, College of Forest Science, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing, China;2. Institute of Forestry and Climate Change Research, Beijing Forestry University, Beijing, China;3. State Forestry Administration of China Key Laboratory of Forest Ecology and Environment, Institute of Forest Ecology, Environment and Protection, Chinese Academy of Forestry, Beijing, China
Abstract:Forest soils store vast amounts of terrestrial carbon, but we are still limited in mechanistic understanding on how soil organic carbon (SOC) stabilization or turnover is controlled by biotic and abiotic factors in forest ecosystems. We used phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs) as biomarker to study soil microbial community structure and measured activities of five extracellular enzymes involved in the degradation of cellulose (i.e., β‐1,4‐glucosidase and cellobiohydrolase), chitin (i.e., β‐1,4‐N‐acetylglucosaminidase), and lignin (i.e., phenol oxidase and peroxidase) as indicators of soil microbial functioning in carbon transformation or turnover across varying biotic and abiotic conditions in a typical temperate forest ecosystem in central China. Redundancy analysis (RDA) was performed to determine the interrelationship between individual PFLAs and biotic and abiotic site factors as well as the linkage between soil microbial structure and function. Path analysis was further conducted to examine the controls of site factors on soil microbial community structure and the regulatory pathway of changes in SOC relating to microbial community structure and function. We found that soil microbial community structure is strongly influenced by water, temperature, SOC, fine root mass, clay content, and C/N ratio in soils and that the relative abundance of Gram‐negative bacteria, saprophytic fungi, and actinomycetes explained most of the variations in the specific activities of soil enzymes involved in SOC transformation or turnover. The abundance of soil bacterial communities is strongly linked with the extracellular enzymes involved in carbon transformation, whereas the abundance of saprophytic fungi is associated with activities of extracellular enzymes driving carbon oxidation. Findings in this study demonstrate the complex interactions and linkage among plant traits, microenvironment, and soil physiochemical properties in affecting SOC via microbial regulations.
Keywords:Decomposition  extracellular enzymes  forest soil carbon  pathway analysis  phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs)  redundancy analysis (RDA)  temperate forest
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