Altered soil microbial community at elevated CO2 leads to loss of soil carbon

被引:390
|
作者
Carney, Karen M.
Hungate, Bruce A.
Drake, Bert G.
Megonigal, J. Patrick
机构
[1] Smithsonian Environm Res Ctr, Edgewater, MD 21037 USA
[2] No Arizona Univ, Environm Res Ctr, Dept Biol Sci & Merriam Powell, Flagstaff, AZ 86011 USA
关键词
carbon cycling; global change; microbes; priming effect;
D O I
10.1073/pnas.0610045104
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Increased carbon storage in ecosystems due to elevated CO2 may help stabilize atmospheric CO2 concentrations and slow global warming. Many field studies have found that elevated CO2 leads to higher carbon assimilation by plants, and others suggest that this can lead to higher carbon storage in soils, the largest and most stable terrestrial carbon pool. Here we show that 6 years of experimental CO2 doubling reduced soil carbon in a scrub-oak ecosystem despite higher plant growth, offsetting approximate to 52% of the additional carbon that had accumulated at elevated CO2 in aboveground and coarse root biomass. The decline in soil carbon was driven by changes in soil microbial composition and activity. Soils exposed to elevated CO2 had higher relative abundances of fungi and higher activities of a soil carbon-degrading enzyme, which led to more rapid rates of soil organic matter degradation than soils exposed to ambient CO2. The isotopic composition of microbial fatty acids confirmed that elevated CO2 increased microbial utilization of soil organic matter. These results show how elevated CO2, by altering soil microbial communities, can cause a potential carbon sink to become a carbon source.
引用
收藏
页码:4990 / 4995
页数:6
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Elevated Atmospheric CO2 and Drought Affect Soil Microbial Community and Functional Diversity Associated with Glycine max
    Wang, Junfeng
    Wang, Yuhui
    Song, Xinshan
    Wang, Yuan
    Lei, Xiaohui
    REVISTA BRASILEIRA DE CIENCIA DO SOLO, 2017, 41
  • [22] Long-term elevated CO2 and warming enhance microbial necromass carbon accumulation in a paddy soil
    Liu, Zhiwei
    Liu, Xiuxia
    Wu, Xiulan
    Bian, Rongjun
    Liu, Xiaoyu
    Zheng, Jufeng
    Zhang, Xuhui
    Cheng, Kun
    Li, Lianqing
    Pan, Genxing
    BIOLOGY AND FERTILITY OF SOILS, 2021, 57 (05) : 673 - 684
  • [23] Microbial biomass carbon and methane oxidation influenced by rice cultivars and elevated CO2 in a Japanese paddy soil
    Inubushi, K.
    Cheng, W.
    Mizuno, T.
    Lou, Y.
    Hasegawa, T.
    Sakai, H.
    Kobayashi, K.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 2011, 62 (01) : 69 - 73
  • [24] Long-term elevated CO2 and warming enhance microbial necromass carbon accumulation in a paddy soil
    Zhiwei Liu
    Xiuxia Liu
    Xiulan Wu
    Rongjun Bian
    Xiaoyu Liu
    Jufeng Zheng
    Xuhui Zhang
    Kun Cheng
    Lianqing Li
    Genxing Pan
    Biology and Fertility of Soils, 2021, 57 : 673 - 684
  • [25] Elevated atmospheric CO2 and soil biota
    Hu, SJ
    Firestone, MK
    Chapin, FS
    SCIENCE, 1998, 281 (5376) : 518 - 518
  • [26] Plant, soil microbial and soil inorganic nitrogen responses to elevated CO2:: a study in microcosms of Holcus lanatus
    Barnard, R
    Leadley, PW
    Lensi, R
    Barthes, L
    ACTA OECOLOGICA-INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF ECOLOGY, 2005, 27 (03): : 171 - 178
  • [27] Does elevated atmospheric CO2 affect soil carbon burial and soil weathering in a forest ecosystem?
    Gonzalez-Meler, Miguel A.
    Poghosyan, Armen
    Sanchez-de Leon, Yaniria
    de Olivera, Eduardo Dias
    Norby, Richard J.
    Sturchio, Neil C.
    PEERJ, 2018, 6
  • [28] Impact of elevated CO2 concentrations in the soil on soil solarization efficiency
    Al-Kayssi, A. W.
    APPLIED SOIL ECOLOGY, 2009, 43 (01) : 150 - 158
  • [29] Estimating soil carbon sequestration under elevated CO2 by combining carbon isotope labelling with soil carbon cycle modelling
    Niklaus, Pascal A.
    Falloon, Pete
    GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY, 2006, 12 (10) : 1909 - 1921
  • [30] CARBON ISOTOPES OF SOIL CO2
    GALIMOV, EM
    GEOCHEMISTRY INTERNATIONAL USSR, 1966, 3 (05): : 889 - &