AI Article Synopsis

  • The role of soil microorganisms in contributing to soil organic matter is significantly larger than previously understood, impacting carbon cycling heavily.
  • Adding sulfur to soil initially increases carbon dioxide production through microbial respiration, followed by a substantial rise in atmospheric carbon capture as sulfur is turned into sulfate.
  • Chemoautotrophic bacteria, particularly Thiobacillus species, thrive in specific conditions, demonstrating their capability to convert atmospheric carbon into various soil compounds, indicating a strong influence of land management on carbon cycling.

Article Abstract

The microbial contribution to soil organic matter has been shown to be much larger than previously thought and thus it plays a major role in carbon cycling. Among soil microorganisms, chemoautotrophs can fix CO without sunlight and can glean energy through the oxidation of reduced elements such as sulfur. Here we show that the addition of sulfur to soil results in an initial surge in production of CO through microbial respiration, followed by an order of magnitude increase in the capture of carbon from the atmosphere as elemental sulfur is oxidised to sulfate. Thiobacillus spp., take advantage of specific conditions to become the dominant chemoautotrophic group that consumes CO. We discern the direct incorporation of atmospheric carbon into soil carbohydrate, protein and aliphatic compounds and differentiate these from existing biomass. These results suggest that chemoautotrophs can play a large role in carbon cycling and that this carbon is heavily influenced by land management practises.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5498539PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-04934-9DOI Listing

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