Microbial metabolic responses and CO2 emissions differentiated by soil water content variation in subarctic tundra soils
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Title
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Microbial metabolic responses and CO2 emissions differentiated by soil water content variation in subarctic tundra soils
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Other Titles
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아북극권 툰드라 토양수분 변화에 따른 미생물 분해대사률과 이산화탄소 방출량 변화
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Authors
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Kim, Dockyu
채남이
Kim, Mincheol
Nam, Sungjin
Kim, Tai Kyoung
Park, Ki-Tae
Lee, Bang Yong
김응빈
Lee, Hyoungseok
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Keywords
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Arctic tundra soil; CO2 emission; global warming; microbial decomposition; soil organic matter
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Issue Date
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2022
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Citation
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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.
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Abstract
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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.
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URI
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https://repository.kopri.re.kr/handle/201206/14128
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DOI
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12275-022-2378-3
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Type
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Article
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Station
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기타()
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Indexed
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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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