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Does declining carbon-use efficiency explain thermal acclimation of soil respiration with warming? | LitMetric

Does declining carbon-use efficiency explain thermal acclimation of soil respiration with warming?

Glob Chang Biol

Department of Botany, University of Wyoming, 3165, 1000 E. University Avenue, Laramie, WY, 82071, USA.

Published: January 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • Enhanced soil respiration due to global warming could significantly raise atmospheric CO2 levels, beyond human contributions, influenced by how soil temperature affects respiration.
  • The study explored soil respiration's response to temperature changes and substrate availability, utilizing a new Bayesian model that incorporates both substrate effects and temperature responses through Michaelis-Menten and Arrhenius equations.
  • Results revealed that short-term reductions in respiration can stem from substrate depletion and a decrease in microbial biomass carbon, while seasonal acclimation shows higher carbon-use efficiency in summer soils, indicating that these factors will impact long-term carbon storage in soils.

Article Abstract

Enhanced soil respiration in response to global warming may substantially increase atmospheric CO2 concentrations above the anthropogenic contribution, depending on the mechanisms underlying the temperature sensitivity of soil respiration. Here, we compared short-term and seasonal responses of soil respiration to a shifting thermal environment and variable substrate availability via laboratory incubations. To analyze the data from incubations, we implemented a novel process-based model of soil respiration in a hierarchical Bayesian framework. Our process model combined a Michaelis-Menten-type equation of substrate availability and microbial biomass with an Arrhenius-type nonlinear temperature response function. We tested the competing hypotheses that apparent thermal acclimation of soil respiration can be explained by depletion of labile substrates in warmed soils, or that physiological acclimation reduces respiration rates. We demonstrated that short-term apparent acclimation can be induced by substrate depletion, but that decreasing microbial biomass carbon (MBC) is also important, and lower MBC at warmer temperatures is likely due to decreased carbon-use efficiency (CUE). Observed seasonal acclimation of soil respiration was associated with higher CUE and lower basal respiration for summer- vs. winter-collected soils. Whether the observed short-term decrease in CUE or the seasonal acclimation of CUE with increased temperatures dominates the response to long-term warming will have important consequences for soil organic carbon storage.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.12036DOI Listing

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