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Simulated warming enhances the responses of microbial N transformations to reactive N input in a Tibetan alpine meadow. | LitMetric

Simulated warming enhances the responses of microbial N transformations to reactive N input in a Tibetan alpine meadow.

Environ Int

Ecosystem Ecology Lab, College of Resources and Environmental Sciences, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China; Department of Entomology & Plant Pathology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA. Electronic address:

Published: August 2020

Alpine ecosystems worldwide are characterized with high soil organic carbon (C) and low mineral nitrogen (N). Climate warming has been predicted to stimulate microbial decomposition and N mineralization in these systems. However, experimental results are highly variable, and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. We examined the effects of warming, N input, and their combination on soil N pools and N-cycling microbes in a field manipulation experiment. Special attention was directed to the ammonia-oxidizing bacteria and archaea, and their mediated N-cycling processes (transformation rates and NO emissions) in the third plant growing season after the treatments were initiated. Nitrogen input (12 g m y) alone significantly increased soil mineral N pools and plant N uptake, and stimulated the growth of AOB and NO emissions in the late growing season. While warming (by 1.4 °C air temperature) alone did not have significant effects on most parameters, it amplified the effects of N input on soil N concentrations and AOB abundance, eliciting a chain reaction that increased nitrification potential (+83%), soil NO-N (+200%), and NO emissions (+412%) across the whole season. Also, N input reduced AOB diversity but increased the dominance of genus Nitrosospira within the AOB community, corresponding to the increased NO emissions. These results showed that a small temperature increase in soil may significantly enhance N losses through NO leaching and NO emissions when mineral N becomes available. These findings suggest that interactions among global change factors may predominantly affect ammonia-oxidizing microbes and their mediated N-cycling processes in alpine ecosystems under future climate change scenarios.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.envint.2020.105795DOI Listing

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