Microbial responses to warming enhance soil carbon loss following translocation across a tropical forest elevation gradient

Andrew T. Nottingham, Jeanette Whitaker, Nick J. Ostle, Richard Bardgett, Niall P. Mcnamara, Noah Fierer, Norma Salinas, Adan Ccahuana, Benjamin L. Turner, Patrick Meir

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Abstract

Tropical soils contain huge carbon stocks, which climate warming is projected to reduce by stimulating organic matter decomposition, creating a positive feedback that will promote further warming. Models predict that the loss of carbon from warming soils will be mediated by microbial physiology, but no empirical data are available on the response of soil carbon and microbial physiology to warming in tropical forests, which dominate the terrestrial carbon cycle. Here we show that warming caused a considerable loss of soil carbon that was enhanced by associated changes in microbial physiology. By translocating soils across a 3000 m elevation gradient in tropical forest, equivalent to a temperature change of ±15°C, we found that soil carbon declined over 5 years by 4% in response to each 1oC increase in temperature. The total loss of carbon was related to its quantity and lability, and was enhanced by changes in microbial physiology including increased microbial carbon-use-efficiency, shifts in community composition towards microbial taxa associated with warmer temperatures, and increased activity of hydrolytic enzymes. These findings suggest that microbial feedbacks will cause considerable loss of carbon from tropical forest soils in response to predicted climatic warming this century.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEcology Letters
Early online date6 Sept 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 9 Oct 2019

Keywords

  • carbon-use-efficiency
  • climate feedback
  • climate warming
  • elevation gradient
  • lowland tropical forest
  • montane tropical forest
  • Q10
  • soil carbon cycle
  • translocation

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