Microbial carbon use efficiency promotes global soil carbon storage

被引:0
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作者
Feng Tao
Yuanyuan Huang
Bruce A. Hungate
Stefano Manzoni
Serita D. Frey
Michael W. I. Schmidt
Markus Reichstein
Nuno Carvalhais
Philippe Ciais
Lifen Jiang
Johannes Lehmann
Ying-Ping Wang
Benjamin Z. Houlton
Bernhard Ahrens
Umakant Mishra
Gustaf Hugelius
Toby D. Hocking
Xingjie Lu
Zheng Shi
Kostiantyn Viatkin
Ronald Vargas
Yusuf Yigini
Christian Omuto
Ashish A. Malik
Guillermo Peralta
Rosa Cuevas-Corona
Luciano E. Di Paolo
Isabel Luotto
Cuijuan Liao
Yi-Shuang Liang
Vinisa S. Saynes
Xiaomeng Huang
Yiqi Luo
机构
[1] Institute for Global Change Studies,Department of Earth System Science, Ministry of Education Key Laboratory for Earth System Modelling
[2] Tsinghua University,Key Laboratory of Ecosystem Network Observation and Modeling
[3] Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry,Center for Ecosystem Science and Society, Department of Biological Sciences
[4] Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations,School of Informatics, Computing and Cyber Systems
[5] Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research,Department of Physical Geography and Bolin Centre for Climate Research
[6] Chinese Academy of Sciences,Center for Soil Biogeochemistry and Microbial Ecology, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment
[7] Northern Arizona University,Department of Geography
[8] Northern Arizona University,Departamento de Ciências e Engenharia do Ambiente
[9] Stockholm University,Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l’Environnement, LSCE/IPSL, CEA
[10] University of New Hampshire,CNRS
[11] University of Zurich,UVSQ
[12] DCEA,School of Integrative Plant Science
[13] Faculdade de Ciências e Tecnologia,Soil and Crop Sciences Section, School of Integrative Plant Science
[14] FCT,Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Department of Global Development
[15] Universidade Nova de Lisboa,Computational Biology and Biophysics
[16] Université Paris-Saclay,Joint BioEnergy Institute
[17] Cornell University,School of Atmospheric Sciences
[18] Cornell University,Institute for Environmental Genomics and Department of Microbiology and Plant Biology
[19] CSIRO Environment,School of Biological Sciences
[20] Cornell University,undefined
[21] Sandia National Laboratories,undefined
[22] Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory,undefined
[23] Sun Yat-sen University,undefined
[24] University of Oklahoma,undefined
[25] University of Aberdeen,undefined
来源
Nature | 2023年 / 618卷
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摘要
Soils store more carbon than other terrestrial ecosystems1,2. How soil organic carbon (SOC) forms and persists remains uncertain1,3, which makes it challenging to understand how it will respond to climatic change3,4. It has been suggested that soil microorganisms play an important role in SOC formation, preservation and loss5–7. Although microorganisms affect the accumulation and loss of soil organic matter through many pathways4,6,8–11, microbial carbon use efficiency (CUE) is an integrative metric that can capture the balance of these processes12,13. Although CUE has the potential to act as a predictor of variation in SOC storage, the role of CUE in SOC persistence remains unresolved7,14,15. Here we examine the relationship between CUE and the preservation of SOC, and interactions with climate, vegetation and edaphic properties, using a combination of global-scale datasets, a microbial-process explicit model, data assimilation, deep learning and meta-analysis. We find that CUE is at least four times as important as other evaluated factors, such as carbon input, decomposition or vertical transport, in determining SOC storage and its spatial variation across the globe. In addition, CUE shows a positive correlation with SOC content. Our findings point to microbial CUE as a major determinant of global SOC storage. Understanding the microbial processes underlying CUE and their environmental dependence may help the prediction of SOC feedback to a changing climate.
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页码:981 / 985
页数:4
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