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Microbial autotrophy explains large‐scale soil <scp>CO<sub>2</sub></scp> fixation

89

Citations

43

References

2022

Year

Abstract

Microbial communities play critical roles in fixing carbon from the atmosphere and fixing it in the soils. However, the large-scale variations and drivers of these microbial communities remain poorly understood. Here, we conducted a large-scale survey across China and found that soil autotrophic organisms are critical for explaining CO<sub>2</sub> fluxes from the atmosphere to soils. In particular, we showed that large-scale variations in CO<sub>2</sub> fixation rates are highly correlated to those in autotrophic bacteria and phototrophic protists. Paddy soils, supporting a larger proportion of obligate bacterial and protist autotrophs, display four-fold of CO<sub>2</sub> fixation rates over upland and forest soils. Precipitation and pH, together with key ecological clusters of autotrophic microbes, also played important roles in controlling CO<sub>2</sub> fixation. Our work provides a novel quantification on the contribution of terrestrial autotrophic microbes to soil CO<sub>2</sub> fixation processes at a large scale, with implications for global carbon regulation under climate change.

References

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