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Linkage between temperature sensitivity of <scp>SOM</scp> decomposition and microbial communities depends on soil fractions

20

Citations

75

References

2024

Year

Abstract

The magnitude of terrestrial carbon (C)-climate feedback largely depends on the temperature sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) decomposition (Q<sub>10</sub>). However, our understanding of determinants of Q<sub>10</sub> for SOM fractions such as particulate and mineral-associated organic matter (POM and MAOM, respectively) is still inadequate. Particularly, it remains unclear whether microbial effects on Q<sub>10</sub> are fraction-dependent, which induces large uncertainties in projecting soil C dynamics. Here, we conducted large-scale topsoil sampling on the Tibetan Plateau, in combination with SOM fractionation and 300-day laboratory incubation to assess SOM fraction-dependent linkages between Q<sub>10</sub> and microbial properties. We found that compared with MAOM, POM had larger Q<sub>10</sub> and greater microbial diversity, and also structured distinct microbial communities as well as their co-occurrence patterns. Furthermore, associations of Q<sub>10</sub> with microbial properties differed between the two SOM fractions. Bacterial community composition and relative abundance of bacterial keystone taxa affected Q<sub>10</sub> for POM and MAOM respectively, while bacterial alpha diversity showed opposite relationships with Q<sub>10</sub> for POM and MAOM. These findings highlight the necessity of incorporating SOM fraction-dependent microbial properties and their linkages with Q<sub>10</sub> into Earth system models to accurately predict terrestrial C-climate feedback.

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