Climate change disrupts the seasonal coupling of plant and soil microbial nutrient cycling in an alpine ecosystem

Arthur A. D. Broadbent,Lindsay K. Newbold, William J. Pritchard,Antonios Michas, Tim Goodall,Irene Cordero, Andrew Giunta, Helen S. K. Snell, Violette V. L. H. Pepper,Helen K. Grant, David X. Soto,Ruediger Kaufmann, Michael Schloter,Robert I. Griffiths, Michael Bahn,Richard D. Bardgett

GLOBAL CHANGE BIOLOGY(2024)

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摘要
The seasonal coupling of plant and soil microbial nutrient demands is crucial for efficient ecosystem nutrient cycling and plant production, especially in strongly seasonal alpine ecosystems. Yet, how these seasonal nutrient cycling processes are modified by climate change and what the consequences are for nutrient loss and retention in alpine ecosystems remain unclear. Here, we explored how two pervasive climate change factors, reduced snow cover and shrub expansion, interactively modify the seasonal coupling of plant and soil microbial nitrogen (N) cycling in alpine grasslands, which are warming at double the rate of the global average. We found that the combination of reduced snow cover and shrub expansion disrupted the seasonal coupling of plant and soil N-cycling, with pronounced effects in spring (shortly after snow melt) and autumn (at the onset of plant senescence). In combination, both climate change factors decreased plant organic N-uptake by 70% and 82%, soil microbial biomass N by 19% and 38% and increased soil denitrifier abundances by 253% and 136% in spring and autumn, respectively. Shrub expansion also individually modified the seasonality of soil microbial community composition and stoichiometry towards more N-limited conditions and slower nutrient cycling in spring and autumn. In winter, snow removal markedly reduced the fungal:bacterial biomass ratio, soil N pools and shifted bacterial community composition. Taken together, our findings suggest that interactions between climate change factors can disrupt the temporal coupling of plant and soil microbial N-cycling processes in alpine grasslands. This could diminish the capacity of these globally widespread alpine ecosystems to retain N and support plant productivity under future climate change. Seasonal transfers of nutrients between plants and soil microbes are crucial for nutrient retention in alpine ecosystems. Here, we show that two important climate change factors in alpine ecosystems, reduced snow cover and shifts in vegetation, interactively disrupt these seasonal transfers of nutrients. Future climate change could therefore diminish the capacity of globally widespread alpine ecosystems to retain nutrients, with far-reaching consequences for nutrient cycling and plant productivity.image
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alpine ecosystems,climate change,nutrient cycling,plant-soil interactions,seasonality,shrub expansion,snow cover
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