Literature DB >> 30643243

Cross-biome patterns in soil microbial respiration predictable from evolutionary theory on thermal adaptation.

Mark A Bradford1, Rebecca L McCulley2, Thomas W Crowther3, Emily E Oldfield4, Stephen A Wood4,5, Noah Fierer6,7.   

Abstract

Climate warming may stimulate microbial metabolism of soil carbon, causing a carbon-cycle-climate feedback whereby carbon is redistributed from the soil to atmospheric CO2. The magnitude of this feedback is uncertain, in part because warming-induced shifts in microbial physiology and/or community composition could retard or accelerate soil carbon losses. Here, we measure microbial respiration rates for soils collected from 22 sites in each of 3 years, at locations spanning boreal to tropical climates. Respiration was measured in the laboratory with standard temperatures, moisture and excess carbon substrate, to allow physiological and community effects to be detected independent of the influence of these abiotic controls. Patterns in respiration for soils collected across the climate gradient are consistent with evolutionary theory on physiological responses that compensate for positive effects of temperature on metabolism. Respiration rates per unit microbial biomass were as much as 2.6 times higher for soils sampled from sites with a mean annual temperature of -2.0 versus 21.7 °C. Subsequent 100-d incubations suggested differences in the plasticity of the thermal response among microbial communities, with communities sampled from sites with higher mean annual temperature having a more plastic response. Our findings are consistent with adaptive metabolic responses to contrasting thermal regimes that are also observed in plants and animals. These results may help build confidence in soil-carbon-climate feedback projections by improving understanding of microbial processes represented in biogeochemical models.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30643243     DOI: 10.1038/s41559-018-0771-4

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


  10 in total

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Review 2.  Scientists' warning to humanity: microorganisms and climate change.

Authors:  Ricardo Cavicchioli; William J Ripple; Kenneth N Timmis; Farooq Azam; Lars R Bakken; Matthew Baylis; Michael J Behrenfeld; Antje Boetius; Philip W Boyd; Aimée T Classen; Thomas W Crowther; Roberto Danovaro; Christine M Foreman; Jef Huisman; David A Hutchins; Janet K Jansson; David M Karl; Britt Koskella; David B Mark Welch; Jennifer B H Martiny; Mary Ann Moran; Victoria J Orphan; David S Reay; Justin V Remais; Virginia I Rich; Brajesh K Singh; Lisa Y Stein; Frank J Stewart; Matthew B Sullivan; Madeleine J H van Oppen; Scott C Weaver; Eric A Webb; Nicole S Webster
Journal:  Nat Rev Microbiol       Date:  2019-06-18       Impact factor: 60.633

3.  Deep learning predicts microbial interactions from self-organized spatiotemporal patterns.

Authors:  Joon-Yong Lee; Natalie C Sadler; Robert G Egbert; Christopher R Anderton; Kirsten S Hofmockel; Janet K Jansson; Hyun-Seob Song
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4.  The thermal response of soil microbial methanogenesis decreases in magnitude with changing temperature.

Authors:  Hongyang Chen; Ting Zhu; Bo Li; Changming Fang; Ming Nie
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2020-11-12       Impact factor: 14.919

5.  Temperature, moisture and freeze-thaw controls on CO2 production in soil incubations from northern peatlands.

Authors:  Eunji Byun; Fereidoun Rezanezhad; Linden Fairbairn; Stephanie Slowinski; Nathan Basiliko; Jonathan S Price; William L Quinton; Pascale Roy-Léveillée; Kara Webster; Philippe Van Cappellen
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6.  Soil microbial sensitivity to temperature remains unchanged despite community compositional shifts along geothermal gradients.

Authors:  Gabriel Y K Moinet; Manpreet K Dhami; John E Hunt; Anastasija Podolyan; Liyĭn L Liáng; Louis A Schipper; David Whitehead; Jonathan Nuñez; Adriano Nascente; Peter Millard
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Review 8.  The Consequences of Our Changing Environment on Life Threatening and Debilitating Fungal Diseases in Humans.

Authors:  Norman van Rhijn; Michael Bromley
Journal:  J Fungi (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-07

9.  Soil microbial respiration adapts to ambient temperature in global drylands.

Authors:  Marina Dacal; Mark A Bradford; César Plaza; Fernando T Maestre; Pablo García-Palacios
Journal:  Nat Ecol Evol       Date:  2019-01-14       Impact factor: 15.460

10.  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

  10 in total

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