Literature DB >> 33305411

Winter warming rapidly increases carbon degradation capacities of fungal communities in tundra soil: Potential consequences on carbon stability.

Jingmin Cheng1, Yunfeng Yang1, Mengting M Yuan2,3, Qun Gao1, Liyou Wu2, Ziyan Qin1, Zhou J Shi2,4, Edward A G Schuur5, James R Cole6, James M Tiedje6, Jizhong Zhou1,2,7,8.   

Abstract

High-latitude tundra ecosystems are increasingly affected by climate warming. As an important fraction of soil microorganisms, fungi play essential roles in carbon degradation, especially the old, chemically recalcitrant carbon. However, it remains obscure how fungi respond to climate warming and whether fungi, in turn, affect carbon stability of tundra. In a 2-year winter soil warming experiment of 2°C by snow fences, we investigated responses of fungal communities to warming in the active layer of an Alaskan tundra. Although fungal community composition, revealed by the 28S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, remained unchanged (p > .05), fungal functional gene composition, revealed by a microarray named GeoChip, was altered (p < .05). Changes in functional gene composition were linked to winter soil temperature, thaw depth, soil moisture, and gross primary productivity (canonical correlation analysis, p < .05). Specifically, relative abundances of fungal genes encoding invertase, xylose reductase and vanillin dehydrogenase significantly increased (p < .05), indicating higher carbon degradation capacities of fungal communities under warming. Accordingly, we detected changes in fungal gene networks under warming, including higher average path distance, lower average clustering coefficient and lower percentage of negative links, indicating that warming potentially changed fungal interactions. Together, our study reveals higher carbon degradation capacities of fungal communities under short-term warming and highlights the potential impacts of fungal communities on tundra ecosystem respiration, and consequently future carbon stability of high-latitude tundra.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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Keywords:  Alaskan tundra; carbon degradation; functional gene; network analysis; soil fungal communities; winter warming

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Year:  2020        PMID: 33305411     DOI: 10.1111/mec.15773

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  1 in total

1.  Effects of fertilizer practice on fungal and actinobacterial cellulolytic community with different humified particle-size fractions in double-cropping field.

Authors:  Haiming Tang; Chao Li; Yilan Xu; Kaikai Cheng; Lihong Shi; Li Wen; Weiyan Li; Xiaoping Xiao
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-16       Impact factor: 4.379

  1 in total

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