Temperature-mediated microbial carbon utilization in China's lakes.

Glob Chang Biol

State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan, the People's Republic of China.

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Microbes are crucial for carbon cycling in aquatic environments, but their responses to temperature changes are not well understood across different regions.
  • The study examined 47 lakes in China with varying temperatures and found that warmer lakes had lower carbon concentrations but higher carbon utilization, linked to shifts in bacterial communities.
  • Key microbial species influencing carbon usage changed with temperature increases, highlighting how temperature impacts bacterial interactions with carbon sources and offering insights into carbon management in a warming climate.

Article Abstract

Microbes play an important role in aquatic carbon cycling but we have a limited understanding of their functional responses to changes in temperature across large geographic areas. Here, we explored how microbial communities utilized different carbon substrates and the underlying ecological mechanisms along a space-for-time substitution temperature gradient of future climate change. The gradient included 47 lakes from five major lake regions in China spanning a difference of nearly 15°C in mean annual temperatures (MAT). Our results indicated that lakes from warmer regions generally had lower values of variables related to carbon concentrations and greater carbon utilization than those from colder regions. The greater utilization of carbon substrates under higher temperatures could be attributed to changes in bacterial community composition, with a greater abundance of Cyanobacteria and Actinobacteriota and less Proteobacteria in warmer lake regions. We also found that the core species in microbial networks changed with increasing temperature, from Hydrogenophaga and Rhodobacteraceae, which inhibited the utilization of amino acids and carbohydrates, to the CL500-29-marine-group, which promoted the utilization of all almost carbon substrates. Overall, our findings suggest that temperature can mediate aquatic carbon utilization by changing the interactions between bacteria and individual carbon substrates, and the discovery of core species that affect carbon utilization provides insight into potential carbon sequestration within inland water bodies under future climate warming.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.16840DOI Listing

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