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  4. Diminished soil functions occur under simulated climate change in a sup-alpine pasture, but heterotrophic temperature sensitivity indicates microbial resilience
 
research article

Diminished soil functions occur under simulated climate change in a sup-alpine pasture, but heterotrophic temperature sensitivity indicates microbial resilience

Mills, Robert T. E.  
•
Gavazov, Konstantin S.  
•
Spiegelberger, Thomas  
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2014
Science Of The Total Environment

The pressure of climate change is disproportionately high in mountainous regions, and small changes may push ecosystem processes beyond sensitivity thresholds, creating new dynamics of carbon and nutrient cycling. Given that the rate of organic matter decomposition is strongly dependent upon temperature and soil moisture, the sensitivity of soil respiration to both metrics is highly relevant when considering soil atmosphere feedbacks under a changing climate. To assess the effects of changing climate in a mountain pasture system, we transplanted turfs along an elevation gradient, monitored in situ soil respiration, incubated collected top-soils to determine legacy effects on temperature sensitivity, and analysed soil organic matter (SOM) to detect changes in quality and quantity of SOM fractions. In situ transplantation down-slope reduced soil moisture and increased soil temperature, with concurrent reductions in soil respiration. Soil moisture acted as an overriding constraint to soil respiration, and significantly reduced the sensitivity to temperature. Under controlled laboratory conditions, removal of the moisture constraint to heterotrophic respiration led to a significant respiration-temperature response. However, despite lower respiration rates down-slope, the response function was comparable among sites, and therefore unaffected by antecedent conditions. We found shifts in the SOM quality, especially of the light fraction, indicating changes to the dynamics of decomposition of recently deposited material. Our findings highlighted the resilience of the microbial community to severe climatic perturbations, but also that soil moisture stress during the growing season can significantly reduce soil function in addition to direct effects on plant productivity. This demonstrated the sensitivity of subalpine pastures under climate change, and possible implications for sustainable use given reductions in organic matter turnover and consequent feedbacks to nutrient cycling. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2013.12.071
Web of Science ID

WOS:000331923900052

Author(s)
Mills, Robert T. E.  
Gavazov, Konstantin S.  
Spiegelberger, Thomas  
Johnson, David
Buttler, Alexandre  
Date Issued

2014

Publisher

Elsevier

Published in
Science Of The Total Environment
Volume

473

Start page

465

End page

472

Subjects

Mountain grasslands

•

Climate warming

•

Soil moisture

•

Altitudinal gradient

•

Soil respiration

•

Density fractionation

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
ECOS  
Available on Infoscience
April 14, 2014
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/102789
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