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Seasonal response of soil microbial community structure and life history strategies to winter snow cover change in a temperate forest. | LitMetric

Seasonal response of soil microbial community structure and life history strategies to winter snow cover change in a temperate forest.

Sci Total Environ

School of Ecology and Key Laboratory of Sustainable Forest Ecosystem Management, Ministry of Education, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, China; Northeast Asia Biodiversity Research Center, Northeast Forestry University, Harbin 150040, China. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

Snow cover provides a thermally stable and humid soil environment and thereby regulates soil microbial communities and biogeochemical cycling. A warmer world with large reductions in snow cover and earlier spring snowmelt may disrupt this stability and associated ecosystem functioning. Yet, little is known about the response of soil microbial communities to decreased snowpack and potential carry-over effects beyond the snow cover period. Herein, we tested this response by conducting a snowpack manipulation experiment (control, addition, and removal) in a temperate forest. Our results showed that fungi were more sensitive to changes in snowpack. Thicker snowpack increased the diversity of fungi, but had weak effects on the diversity of bacteria in winter. Thickening snow cover promoted the ratio of fungi to bacteria abundance across the year, and such relative increase in fungi abundance was largely driven by Basidiomycota phyla (Agaricomycetes class). Increased snowpack decreased soil nitrate concentration, and produced carry-over biogeochemical effects evidenced by increased summer β-1,4-glucosidase and N-acetyl-β-glucosaminidase activities. On a seasonal scale, microbial biomass peaked at both winter and summer; winter microbial community was fungi dominated, while bacteria dominated in summer. The abundances of bacterial phyla had greater seasonal variation than fungal phyla. Specifically, Actinobacteria had greater dominance in winter than in summer, while Acidobacteria, Proteobacteria, and Verrucomicrobia had greater abundance in summer than in winter. Microbial high yield-resource acquisition-stress tolerance life history strategies showed significant seasonal tradeoffs, i.e., resource acquisition and stress tolerance strategies dominated in summer, while high yield strategy dominated in winter. Overall, our findings underline that climate-induced reductions in snow cover can disrupt soil biogeochemical cycling also beyond the snow cover period due to shifts in soil microbial community structure and life history strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175066DOI Listing

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