Changing microbial substrate use in Arctic tundra soils through a freeze-thaw cycle

被引:180
作者
Schimel, JP [1 ]
Mikan, C [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Ecol Evolut & Marine Biol, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Arctic tundra; substrate use; temperature; winter; decomposition;
D O I
10.1016/j.soilbio.2004.12.011
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Recent research has established that microbial processes in the arctic continue even when soils are frozen, and that cold-season processes can be important in the overall annual carbon and nitrogen cycles. Despite the importance of wintertime soil microbial processes, our understanding of their controls remains extremely poor. We particularly have a poor understanding of how microbial substrate use patterns change as soils freeze: do microbes use the same substrates as during the growing season, only slower, or do they switch to using different substrates? We used a C-14 isotope equilibration technique to partition respiration between the actively turning over microbial biomass and products pool and the plant detritus pool in a range of Arctic tundra soils. Microbes showed a step-function shift in their metabolism as soils cool from +2 to +0.5 degrees C, roughly doubling the contribution of recycling of microbial C to total soil respiration. There was no additional shift in substrate use as soils underwent bulk soil freezing. The above-0 degrees C substrate shift is important because tundra soils spend a long time at or just below 0 degrees C as they are freezing in the early winter. The change in substrate use represents a shift from processing N-poor detritus to N-rich microbial products, causing N available for either plant uptake or leaching to be greatest when soils are near 0 degrees C. This may explain the observed patterns of growing season N immobilization vs. cold-season mineralization that appear common in Arctic tundra ecosystems. (c) 2005 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1411 / 1418
页数:8
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