The dominance of K-strategy microbes enhances the potential of soil carbon decomposition under long-term warming

Yanli Gao, Jiacong Zhou, Teng chiu Lin, Yiqing Li, Quanxin Zeng, Shidong Chen, Decheng Xiong, Qiufang Zhang, Zhijie Yang*, Yusheng Yang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Soil microorganisms play a central role in regulating ecosystem carbon (C) cycle. Changes in soil microbial communities caused by climate warming could have pervasive impact on terrestrial ecosystem C cycle. However, how soil microbial community, a key player in C cycle in subtropical forests, responds to long-term warming is poorly characterized. We conducted a long-term (6-year) soil warming experiment in a subtropical forest to examine the response of microbial community structure, C-associated metabolic function, and respiration to two levels of soil warming (+2 °C and +5 °C). Both bacterial and fungal alpha-diversity declined under warming treatments. The increased microbial ratio of K- to r-strategists suggests that warming promoted the dominance of K-strategy microbes. C-degradation genes abundance and associated enzyme activities increased by soil warming. Moreover, warming decreased soil organic C content and increased soil microbial respiration under both warming levels. Our results indicate that future global warming can accelerate soil C decomposition in subtropical forests through altering the structure of microbial communities and promoting the C-associated metabolic function.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105854
JournalApplied Soil Ecology
Volume206
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025 Feb

Keywords

  • C-degradation gene
  • Climate change
  • Metabolic function
  • Microbial diversity
  • Microbial life strategy
  • Soil microbial respiration

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Ecology
  • Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous)
  • Soil Science

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