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Microbial metabolic responses and CO2 emissions differentiated by soil water content variation in subarctic tundra soils

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Title
Microbial metabolic responses and CO2 emissions differentiated by soil water content variation in subarctic tundra soils
Other Titles
아북극권 툰드라 토양수분 변화에 따른 미생물 분해대사률과 이산화탄소 방출량 변화
Authors
Kim, Dockyu
채남이
Kim, Mincheol
Nam, Sungjin
Kim, Tai Kyoung
Park, Ki-Tae
Lee, Bang Yong
김응빈
Lee, Hyoungseok
Keywords
Arctic tundra soilCO2 emissionglobal warmingmicrobial decompositionsoil organic matter
Issue Date
2022
Citation
Kim, Dockyu, et al. 2022. "Microbial metabolic responses and CO2 emissions differentiated by soil water content variation in subarctic tundra soils". JOURNAL OF MICROBIOLOGY, 60(12): 1130-1138.
Abstract
Recent rapid air temperature increases across the northern-latitude tundra have prolonged permafrost thawing and snow melting periods, resulting in increased soil temperature (Ts) and volumetric soil water content (SWC). Under prolonged soil warming at 8 °C, Alaskan tundra soils were incubated in a microcosm system and examined for the SWC differential influence on the microbial decomposition activity of large molecular weight (MW) humic substances (HS). When one microcosm soil (AKC1-1) was incubated at a constant SWC of 41% for 90 days (T=90) and then SWC was gradually decreased from 41% to 29% for another T=90, the initial HS was partly depolymerized. In contrast, in AKC1-2 incubated at a gradually decreasing SWC from the initial 32% to 10% for T=90 and then increasing to 27% for another T=90, HS depolymerization was undetected. Overall, the microbial communities in AKC1-1 could maintain metabolic activity at sufficient and constant SWC during the initial T=90 incubation. In contrast, AKC1-2 microbes may have been damaged by drought stress during the drying SWC regimen, possibly resulting in the loss of HS decomposition activity, which did not recover even after re-wetting to an optimal SWC range. After T=90, the CO2 production in both treatments was attributed to the increased decomposition of small-MW organic compounds (including aerobic HS-degradative products) within an optimal SWC range (20%?40%). We expect this study to provide new insights into the early effects of warming- and topography-induced SWC variations on the microbial contribution to CO2 emissions via HS decomposition in northern-latitude tundra soil.
URI
https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/14128
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12275-022-2378-3
Type
Article
Station
기타()
Indexed
SCIE
Appears in Collections  
2022-2022, Changes in biogeochemical processes of Arctic terrestrial ecosystem in response to climate change (22-22) / Jung, Ji Young (PN22012)
2022-2022, Interrelationship Investigation and Comprehensive Monitoring based on Permafrost-Atmospheric Environment (22-22) / Lee, Bang Yong (PN22011)
2022-2022, Ecophysiology of Antarctic terrestrial organisms to reveal mechanisms of adaptation to changing environment (22-22) / Lee, Hyoungseok (PE22130)
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