Arctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research (Jan 2021)

Impact of long-term fertilizer and summer warming treatments on bulk soil and birch rhizosphere microbial communities in mesic arctic tundra

  • Michelle M. McKnight,
  • Paul Grogan,
  • Virginia K. Walker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/15230430.2021.1951949
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53, no. 1
pp. 196 – 211

Abstract

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Recent climate warming in the Arctic is enhancing microbial decomposition of soil organic matter, which may result in globally significant greenhouse gas releases to the atmosphere. To better predict future impacts, bacterial and fungal community structures in both the bulk soil and the rhizosphere of Arctic birch, Betula glandulosa, were determined in control, greenhouse summer warming, and annual factorial nitrogen (N) and phosphate (P) addition treatments twelve years after their establishment. DNA sequence analyses at multiple taxonomic levels consistently indicated substantial bulk soil and rhizosphere microbial community differences among the fertilization treatments but no significant greenhouse effects. These results suggest that climate warming will likely increase the activity rates of soil microbial decomposers but without substantially altering the structure of either the bacterial or fungal communities. Differential abundance testing revealed changes in ectomycorrhizal fungal species of the genus Thelephora in both bulk soil and rhizosphere, with increases in their relative abundance in P and N + P amended plots compared with warming and controls. Because birch is the principal low Arctic ectomycorrhizal host, our results suggest that these fungi may promote this shrub’s competitiveness where tundra soil nutrient availability is enhanced by warming or other means, ultimately contributing to arctic vegetation “greening.”

Keywords