Literature DB >> 24307658

Salinity affects microbial activity and soil organic matter content in tidal wetlands.

Ember M Morrissey1, Jaimie L Gillespie, Joseph C Morina, Rima B Franklin.   

Abstract

Climate change-associated sea level rise is expected to cause saltwater intrusion into many historically freshwater ecosystems. Of particular concern are tidal freshwater wetlands, which perform several important ecological functions including carbon sequestration. To predict the impact of saltwater intrusion in these environments, we must first gain a better understanding of how salinity regulates decomposition in natural systems. This study sampled eight tidal wetlands ranging from freshwater to oligohaline (0-2 ppt) in four rivers near the Chesapeake Bay (Virginia). To help isolate salinity effects, sites were selected to be highly similar in terms of plant community composition and tidal influence. Overall, salinity was found to be strongly negatively correlated with soil organic matter content (OM%) and C : N, but unrelated to the other studied environmental parameters (pH, redox, and above- and below-ground plant biomass). Partial correlation analysis, controlling for these environmental covariates, supported direct effects of salinity on the activity of carbon-degrading extracellular enzymes (β-1, 4-glucosidase, 1, 4-β-cellobiosidase, β-D-xylosidase, and phenol oxidase) as well as alkaline phosphatase, using a per unit OM basis. As enzyme activity is the putative rate-limiting step in decomposition, enhanced activity due to salinity increases could dramatically affect soil OM accumulation. Salinity was also found to be positively related to bacterial abundance (qPCR of the 16S rRNA gene) and tightly linked with community composition (T-RFLP). Furthermore, strong relationships were found between bacterial abundance and/or composition with the activity of specific enzymes (1, 4-β-cellobiosidase, arylsulfatase, alkaline phosphatase, and phenol oxidase) suggesting salinity's impact on decomposition could be due, at least in part, to its effect on the bacterial community. Together, these results indicate that salinity increases microbial decomposition rates in low salinity wetlands, and suggests that these ecosystems may experience decreased soil OM accumulation, accretion, and carbon sequestration rates even with modest levels of saltwater intrusion.
© 2013 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  carbon cycling; decomposition; extracellular enzyme activity; marsh; microbial community structure; saltwater intrusion; sea level rise

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24307658     DOI: 10.1111/gcb.12431

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Glob Chang Biol        ISSN: 1354-1013            Impact factor:   10.863


  23 in total

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7.  Effects of 10 yr of nitrogen and phosphorus fertilization on carbon and nutrient cycling in a tidal freshwater marsh.

Authors:  Ellen R Herbert; Joseph P Schubauer-Berigan; Christopher B Craft
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8.  Liquid Organic Fertilizer Amendment Alters Rhizosphere Microbial Community Structure and Co-occurrence Patterns and Improves Sunflower Yield Under Salinity-Alkalinity Stress.

Authors:  Haiyang Li; Nanyan Luo; Chenglong Ji; Jin Li; Lan Zhang; Li Xiao; Xiaolin She; Zhe Liu; Yulong Li; Cunshou Liu; Qiao Guo; Hangxian Lai
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9.  Different pathways of nitrogen and phosphorus regeneration mediated by extracellular enzymes in temperate lakes under various trophic state.

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10.  Evolutionary history influences the salinity preference of bacterial taxa in wetland soils.

Authors:  Ember M Morrissey; Rima B Franklin
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2015-10-02       Impact factor: 5.640

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