Literature DB >> 30150743

The influence of soil communities on the temperature sensitivity of soil respiration.

Alice S A Johnston1, Richard M Sibly2.   

Abstract

Soil respiration represents a major carbon flux between terrestrial ecosystems and the atmosphere, and is expected to accelerate under climate warming. Despite its importance in climate change forecasts, however, our understanding of the effects of temperature on soil respiration (RS) is incomplete. Using a metabolic ecology approach we link soil biota metabolism, community composition and heterotrophic activity to predict RS rates across five biomes. We find that accounting for the ecological mechanisms underpinning decomposition processes predicts climatological RS variations observed in an independent dataset (n = 312). The importance of community composition is evident because without it RS is substantially underestimated. With increasing temperature, we predict a latitudinal increase in RS temperature sensitivity, with Q10 values ranging between 2.33 ± 0.01 in tropical forests to 2.72 ± 0.03 in tundra. This global trend has been widely observed, but has not previously been linked to soil communities.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 30150743     DOI: 10.1038/s41559-018-0648-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol        ISSN: 2397-334X            Impact factor:   15.460


  4 in total

1.  The temperature sensitivity of soil: microbial biodiversity, growth, and carbon mineralization.

Authors:  Chao Wang; Ember M Morrissey; Rebecca L Mau; Michaela Hayer; Juan Piñeiro; Michelle C Mack; Jane C Marks; Sheryl L Bell; Samantha N Miller; Egbert Schwartz; Paul Dijkstra; Benjamin J Koch; Bram W Stone; Alicia M Purcell; Steven J Blazewicz; Kirsten S Hofmockel; Jennifer Pett-Ridge; Bruce A Hungate
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2021-03-29       Impact factor: 11.217

2.  Adaptive evolution shapes the present-day distribution of the thermal sensitivity of population growth rate.

Authors:  Dimitrios-Georgios Kontopoulos; Thomas P Smith; Timothy G Barraclough; Samraat Pawar
Journal:  PLoS Biol       Date:  2020-10-16       Impact factor: 8.029

3.  Climate mediates continental scale patterns of stream microbial functional diversity.

Authors:  Félix Picazo; Annika Vilmi; Juha Aalto; Janne Soininen; Emilio O Casamayor; Yongqin Liu; Qinglong Wu; Lijuan Ren; Jizhong Zhou; Ji Shen; Jianjun Wang
Journal:  Microbiome       Date:  2020-06-13       Impact factor: 14.650

4.  Community-level respiration of prokaryotic microbes may rise with global warming.

Authors:  Thomas P Smith; Thomas J H Thomas; Bernardo García-Carreras; Sofía Sal; Gabriel Yvon-Durocher; Thomas Bell; Samrāt Pawar
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2019-11-12       Impact factor: 14.919

  4 in total

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