RUDN Journal of Agronomy and Animal Industries (Oct 2021)

Microbial respiration and functional diversity of soil microbial community under treeline shifts in the Northwestern Caucasus

  • Aleksandra E. Selezneva,
  • Kristina V. Ivashchenko,
  • Sofia V. Sushko,
  • Anna I. Zhuravleva,
  • Nadezhda D. Ananyeva,
  • Sergey A. Blagodatsky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.22363/2312-797X-2021-16-3-226-237
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 3
pp. 226 – 237

Abstract

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In mountain areas, one of the noticeable results of modern climate change is rapid shift of treelines to subalpine and alpine meadows. Such vegetation shifts is associated with a change in quality of the plant residues entering the soils, which in turn can affect the mineralization activity (basal respiration) and functional diversity of the soil microbial community. Therefore, the study was aimed at assessing the soil microbial (basal respiration and functional diversity) and chemical (C, N, C/N, pH) properties (0-10 cm) along the reserved and grazed forest-meadow transects of the Northwestern Caucasus (Karachay-Cherkess Republic), as well as evaluating an effect of vegetation type and land use on variation of these soil properties. It was found that the C and N contents (for both land usees), pH and basal respiration (reserved slope) significantly increase from forest to meadow soils. In contrary, the microbial functional diversity decreased from forest to meadow soils, which might be due to less diverse organic compounds entering the soil only with grass residues than their combination with forest litter. Two-way ANOVA showed that soil microbial functional diversity, pH, C and N along the studied forest-meadow transects was mostly associated with vegetation type (1439 % of the explained variation), and C/N and basal respiration - with land use (3336 % of the explained variation). Thus, a land use change will have a more significant effect on the mineralization activity of soil microbial community than a treeline shifts.

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