CQUniversity
Browse

Carbon limitation overrides acidification in mediating soil microbial activity to nitrogen enrichment in a temperate grassland

journal contribution
posted on 2021-11-01, 00:10 authored by Qiushi Ning, Stephan Hättenschwiler, Xiaotao Lü, Paul Kardol, Yunhai Zhang, Cunzheng Wei, Chengyuan XuChengyuan Xu, Jianhui Huang, Ang Li, Junjie Yang, Jing Wang, Yang Peng, Josep Peñuelas, Jordi Sardans, Jizheng He, Zhihong Xu, Yingzhi Gao, Xingguo Han
Higher ecosystem nitrogen (N) inputs resulting from human activities often suppress soil microbial biomass and respiration, thereby altering biogeochemical cycling. Soil acidification and carbon (C) limitation may drive these microbial responses, yet their relative importance remains elusive, which limits our understanding of the longer term effects of increasing N inputs. In a field experiment with continuous N addition at seven different rates from 0 to 50 g N m−2 year−1 over 6 years in a temperate grassland of Inner Mongolia, China, we examined the responses of soil microbial biomass and respiration to changes in soil acidity and C availability by adding lime and/or glucose to soil samples. Soil microbial biomass and respiration did only weakly respond to increasing soil pH, but increased strongly in response to higher C availability with increasing N addition rates. Soil net N immobilization increased in response to glucose addition, and soil microbial biomass increased at higher rates than microbial respiration along the gradient of previous N addition rates, both suggesting increasingly reinforced microbial C limitation with increasing N addition. Our results provide clear evidence for strong N-induced microbial C limitation, but only little support for soil acidity effects within the initial pH range of 4.73–7.86 covered by our study. Field data support this conclusion by showing reduced plant C allocation belowground in response to N addition, resulting in soil microbial C starvation over the long term. In conclusion, soil microbial biomass and respiration under N addition were strongly dependent on C availability, most likely originating from plant belowground C inputs, and was much less affected by changes in soil pH. Our data help clarify a long-standing debate about how increasing N input rates affect soil microbial biomass and respiration, and improve the mechanistic understanding of the linkages between ecosystem N enrichment and C cycling.

History

Volume

27

Issue

22

Start Page

5976

End Page

5988

Number of Pages

13

eISSN

1365-2486

ISSN

1354-1013

Publisher

Wiley

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2021-07-19

External Author Affiliations

Global Ecology Unit CREAF-CSIC-UAB, Spain; Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences,;Griffith University; University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, State Key Laboratory of Vegetation and Environmental Change, Institute of Botany, Fujian Normal University, Institute of Applied Ecology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China

Author Research Institute

  • Institute for Future Farming Systems

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Global Change Biology