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Plant productivity is a key driver of soil respiration response to climate change in a nutrient-limited soil.
Affiliation:1. Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, Western Sydney University, locked bag 1797, Penrith 2751, NSW, Australia;2. NSW Department of Primary Industries, Elizabeth Macarthur Agricultural Institute, Woodbridge Rd, Menangle, NSW 2568, Australia;3. Global Centre for Land-Based Innovation, Western Sydney University, locked bag 1797, Penrith 2751, NSW, Australia;1. Lhasa Plateau Ecosystem Research Station, Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling, Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;2. College of Resources and Environment, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China
Abstract:Despite knowledge of the interaction between climate change factors significant uncertainty exists concerning the individual and interactive effects of elevated carbon dioxide (eCO2) and elevated temperature (eT) on the soil microbiome and function. Here we examine the individual and interactive effects of eCO2 and eT on tree growth, soil respiration (Rsoil), biomass, structural and functional composition of microbial community, nitrogen (N) mineralisation and N availability in a whole tree chamber experiment. Eucalyptus globulus plants were grown from seedling to ca. 10 m tall for 15 months in a nutrient-poor sandy soil under ambient and elevated (+ 240 ppm) atmospheric CO2 concentrations combined with ambient or elevated temperatures (+ 3 °C) in a full factorial design. Plant growth was strongly stimulated under eCO2, but eT had little impact on any measured plant property. In contrast, Rsoil was not consistently affected by eCO2 or eT, but correlated strongly with root and leaf biomass. The response of N-mineralisation and nutrient availability to eCO2 and eT varied across time, and available N correlated strongly with plant height. Further, the C:N ratio of the microbial biomass and leaves were both higher under eCeT treatment. However, these functional measures were not significantly linked to either structural or functional diversity of the soil microbiome. Taken together, these results suggest that in this low-nutrient soil, belowground processes are principally driven by aboveground productivity. Our work provides novel insight into mechanisms underlying above- and belowground response to climate change, and the potential to sequester C in a low-nutrient status soil under future climatic conditions may be limited .
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