Frontiers in Microbiology (Sep 2023)

Long-term mitigation of drought changes the functional potential and life-strategies of the forest soil microbiome involved in organic matter decomposition

  • Martin Hartmann,
  • Martin Hartmann,
  • Claude Herzog,
  • Claude Herzog,
  • Ivano Brunner,
  • Beat Stierli,
  • Folker Meyer,
  • Folker Meyer,
  • Folker Meyer,
  • Folker Meyer,
  • Nina Buchmann,
  • Beat Frey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1267270
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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Climate change can alter the flow of nutrients and energy through terrestrial ecosystems. Using an inverse climate change field experiment in the central European Alps, we explored how long-term irrigation of a naturally drought-stressed pine forest altered the metabolic potential of the soil microbiome and its ability to decompose lignocellulolytic compounds as a critical ecosystem function. Drought mitigation by a decade of irrigation stimulated profound changes in the functional capacity encoded in the soil microbiome, revealing alterations in carbon and nitrogen metabolism as well as regulatory processes protecting microorganisms from starvation and desiccation. Despite the structural and functional shifts from oligotrophic to copiotrophic microbial lifestyles under irrigation and the observation that different microbial taxa were involved in the degradation of cellulose and lignin as determined by a time-series stable-isotope probing incubation experiment with 13C-labeled substrates, degradation rates of these compounds were not affected by different water availabilities. These findings provide new insights into the impact of precipitation changes on the soil microbiome and associated ecosystem functioning in a drought-prone pine forest and will help to improve our understanding of alterations in biogeochemical cycling under a changing climate.

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