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Tundra soil carbon is vulnerable to rapid microbial decomposition under climate warming
by
Deng, Ye
, Luo, Chengwei
, Van Nostrand, Joy D.
, Xue, Kai
, Qin, Yujia
, Wu, Liyou
, Cheng, Lei
, Natali, Susan
, Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T.
, He, Zhili
, Bracho, Rosvel
, Luo, Yiqi
, J. Shi, Zhou
, Zhou, Jizhong
, Wang, Qiong
, Tiedje, James M.
, M. Yuan, Mengting
, Schuur, Edward. A. G.
, Cole, James R.
in
631/158/855
/ 704/106/694/2739/2819
/ 704/158/855
/ Biology
/ Carbon
/ Climate Change
/ Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
/ Community structure
/ Decomposition
/ Ecosystem biology
/ Ecosystems
/ Environment
/ Environmental Law/Policy/Ecojustice
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Experiments
/ Genomics
/ Global warming
/ Greenhouse gases
/ letter
/ Microbial activity
/ Nutrient cycles
/ Permafrost
/ Snow
/ Taiga & tundra
/ Temperature
/ Terrestrial ecosystems
/ Tundra
2016
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Tundra soil carbon is vulnerable to rapid microbial decomposition under climate warming
by
Deng, Ye
, Luo, Chengwei
, Van Nostrand, Joy D.
, Xue, Kai
, Qin, Yujia
, Wu, Liyou
, Cheng, Lei
, Natali, Susan
, Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T.
, He, Zhili
, Bracho, Rosvel
, Luo, Yiqi
, J. Shi, Zhou
, Zhou, Jizhong
, Wang, Qiong
, Tiedje, James M.
, M. Yuan, Mengting
, Schuur, Edward. A. G.
, Cole, James R.
in
631/158/855
/ 704/106/694/2739/2819
/ 704/158/855
/ Biology
/ Carbon
/ Climate Change
/ Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
/ Community structure
/ Decomposition
/ Ecosystem biology
/ Ecosystems
/ Environment
/ Environmental Law/Policy/Ecojustice
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Experiments
/ Genomics
/ Global warming
/ Greenhouse gases
/ letter
/ Microbial activity
/ Nutrient cycles
/ Permafrost
/ Snow
/ Taiga & tundra
/ Temperature
/ Terrestrial ecosystems
/ Tundra
2016
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Do you wish to request the book?
Tundra soil carbon is vulnerable to rapid microbial decomposition under climate warming
by
Deng, Ye
, Luo, Chengwei
, Van Nostrand, Joy D.
, Xue, Kai
, Qin, Yujia
, Wu, Liyou
, Cheng, Lei
, Natali, Susan
, Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T.
, He, Zhili
, Bracho, Rosvel
, Luo, Yiqi
, J. Shi, Zhou
, Zhou, Jizhong
, Wang, Qiong
, Tiedje, James M.
, M. Yuan, Mengting
, Schuur, Edward. A. G.
, Cole, James R.
in
631/158/855
/ 704/106/694/2739/2819
/ 704/158/855
/ Biology
/ Carbon
/ Climate Change
/ Climate Change/Climate Change Impacts
/ Community structure
/ Decomposition
/ Ecosystem biology
/ Ecosystems
/ Environment
/ Environmental Law/Policy/Ecojustice
/ ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
/ Experiments
/ Genomics
/ Global warming
/ Greenhouse gases
/ letter
/ Microbial activity
/ Nutrient cycles
/ Permafrost
/ Snow
/ Taiga & tundra
/ Temperature
/ Terrestrial ecosystems
/ Tundra
2016
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Tundra soil carbon is vulnerable to rapid microbial decomposition under climate warming
Journal Article
Tundra soil carbon is vulnerable to rapid microbial decomposition under climate warming
2016
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Overview
Release of carbon previously locked in permafrost is a potentially important positive climate feedback. Now metagenomics reveal the vulnerability of active-layer soil carbon to warming-induced microbial decomposition in Alaskan tundra.
Microbial decomposition of soil carbon in high-latitude tundra underlain with permafrost is one of the most important, but poorly understood, potential positive feedbacks of greenhouse gas emissions from terrestrial ecosystems into the atmosphere in a warmer world
1
,
2
,
3
,
4
. Using integrated metagenomic technologies, we showed that the microbial functional community structure in the active layer of tundra soil was significantly altered after only 1.5 years of warming, a rapid response demonstrating the high sensitivity of this ecosystem to warming. The abundances of microbial functional genes involved in both aerobic and anaerobic carbon decomposition were also markedly increased by this short-term warming. Consistent with this, ecosystem respiration (
R
eco
) increased up to 38%. In addition, warming enhanced genes involved in nutrient cycling, which very likely contributed to an observed increase (30%) in gross primary productivity (GPP). However, the GPP increase did not offset the extra
R
eco
, resulting in significantly more net carbon loss in warmed plots compared with control plots. Altogether, our results demonstrate the vulnerability of active-layer soil carbon in this permafrost-based tundra ecosystem to climate warming and the importance of microbial communities in mediating such vulnerability.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK,Nature Publishing Group
Subject
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