• Title of article

    Detecting microbial N-limitation in tussock tundra soil: Implications for Arctic soil organic carbon cycling

  • Author/Authors

    Sistla، نويسنده , , Seeta A. and Asao، نويسنده , , Shinichi and Schimel، نويسنده , , Joshua P.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    78
  • To page
    84
  • Abstract
    More than a third of the global soil organic carbon (SOC) pool is estimated to be stored in northern latitudes. While the primary regulators of microbially-mediated decomposition in physically unprotected organic soils are typically attributed to abiotic factors ( e.g. temperature and moisture), in extremely nutrient-poor environments such as the Alaskan Arctic tussock tundra, evidence from field studies suggests that low N-availability may also strongly limit microbial growth, and thus the rate of SOC decomposition. However, there have been few direct tests of microbial nutrient-limitation, particularly in Arctic systems. We predicted that during the Arctic summer growing season, when both plants and microbes are competing for mineralized nutrients, N-availability in tussock tundra soil is so low that it will limit microbial biomass production, and thus decomposition potential. We tested this prediction by adding N and C to tussock tundra organic soil and tracking microbial responses to these additions. We used a combination of approaches to identify microbial N-limitation, including changes in microbial biomass, C-mineralization, substrate use efficiency, and extracellular enzyme activity. The Arctic soilʹs microbial community demonstrated strong signals of N-limitation, with N-addition increasing all aspects of decomposition tested, including extracellular enzyme activity, the rate-limiting step in decomposition. The corresponding C-addition experiment did not similarly influence the microbial activity of the tundra soil. These results suggest that tundra SOC decomposition is at least seasonally constrained by N-availability through microbial N-limitation. Therefore, explicitly including N as a regulator of microbial growth in this N-poor system is critical to accurately modeling the effects of climatic warming on Arctic SOC decomposition rates.
  • Keywords
    Arctic soils , N-addition , C-mineralization , decomposition , Microbial N-limitation
  • Journal title
    Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Soil Biology and Biochemistry
  • Record number

    2185704