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research article

Global emergent responses of stream microbial metabolism to glacier shrinkage

Kohler, Tyler Joe  
•
Bourquin, Massimo  
•
Peter, Hannes  
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March 1, 2024
Nature Geoscience

Most cryospheric ecosystems are energy limited. How their energetics will respond to climate change remains largely unknown. This is particularly true for glacier-fed streams, which interface with the cryosphere and initiate some of Earth's largest river systems. Here, by studying resource stoichiometry and microbial energetics in 154 glacier-fed streams sampled by the Vanishing Glaciers project across Earth's major mountain ranges, we show that these ecosystems and their benthic microbiome are overall carbon and phosphorus limited. Threshold elemental ratios and low carbon use efficiencies (median: 0.15) modelled from extracellular enzymatic activities corroborate resource limitation in agreement with maintenance metabolism of benthic microorganisms. Space-for-time substitution analyses suggest that glacier shrinkage will stimulate benthic primary production in glacier-fed streams, thereby relieving microbial metabolism from carbon limitation. Concomitantly, we find that increasing streamwater temperature will probably stimulate microbial growth (temperature sensitivity: 0.62 eV). Consequently, elevated microbial demands for phosphorus, but diminishing inputs from subglacial sources, may intensify phosphorus limitation as glaciers shrink. Our study thus unveils a 'green transition' towards autotrophy in the world's glacier-fed streams, entailing shifts in the energetics of their microorganisms.|Glacier shrinkage intensifies phosphorus limitation but alleviates carbon limitation in glacier-fed streams, according to analyses of resource stoichiometry and microbial metabolism in glacier-fed streams from mountain regions.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41561-024-01393-6
Web of Science ID

WOS:001176400200001

Author(s)
Kohler, Tyler Joe  
Bourquin, Massimo  
Peter, Hannes  
Yvon-Durocher, Gabriel
Sinsabaugh, Robert L.
Deluigi, Nicola  
Styllas, Michael
Battin, Tom J  
Corporate authors
Vanishing Glaciers Field Team
Date Issued

2024-03-01

Publisher

Nature Portfolio

Published in
Nature Geoscience
Subjects

Physical Sciences

•

Carbon Use Efficiency

•

Organic-Matter

•

Ecoenzymatic Stoichiometry

•

Bacterial Production

•

Soil

•

Biogeochemistry

•

Temperature

•

Respiration

•

Sediments

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
RIVER  
FunderGrant Number

NOMIS Foundation

Charles University

PRIMUS/22/SCI/001

Charles University Research Centre programme

204069

Available on Infoscience
April 3, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/206846
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