Legacy of Warming and Cover Crops on the Response of Soil Microbial Function to Repeated Drying and Rewetting Cycles

IF 4 2区 农林科学 Q2 SOIL SCIENCE
Adetunji Alex Adekanmbi, Yiran Zou, Xin Shu, Giacomo Pietramellara, Shamina Imran Pathan, Lindsay Todman, Tom Sizmur
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Abstract

The response of soils to extreme weather events will become increasingly important in the future as more frequent and severe floods and droughts are expected to subject soils to drying and rewetting cycles as a result of climate change. These extreme events will be experienced against a backdrop of overall warming. Farmers are adopting cover cropping as a sustainable management practice to increase soil organic matter and benefit soil health. Cover crops may also increase the resilience of soils to help mitigate the impacts of climate change. We examined the legacy of warming and cover crops on the response of soil microbial function to repeated drying and rewetting cycles. We introduced open-top chambers to warm the soil surface of a field plot experiment in which cover crops (single-species monocultures and 4-species polycultures) were grown over the summer after harvest and before planting autumn sown cash crops in a cereal rotation. Soil samples were collected from warmed and ambient areas of the experimental plots in spring, before harvesting the cereal crop. Warming significantly increased, and cover crops significantly decreased, the abundance of genes encoding fungal β-glucosidase. We quantified respiration (a measure of soil microbial function) with high-frequency CO2 flux measurements after 0, 1, 2, 4 or 8 wet/dry cycles imposed in the laboratory and the addition of barley grass powder substrate at a rate of 10 mg g−1 soil. We observed lower cumulative substrate-induced respiration in soils previously planted with cover crop mixtures than expected from the average of the same species grown in monoculture. Repeated drying and rewetting cycles increased the cumulative substrate-induced respiration rate observed, suggesting that repeated perturbations selected for a community adapted to processing the barley shoot powder more quickly. When we calculated the cumulative respiration after 8 wet/dry cycles, relative to cumulative respiration after 0 wet/dry cycles (which we infer represents the extent to which microbial communities adapted to repeated drying and rewetting cycles), our data revealed that the legacy of warming significantly reduced soil microbial community adaptation, but the legacy of cover crops significantly increased, soil microbial community adaptation. This adaptation of the soil microbial community was positively correlated with the concentration of water-extractable organic carbon in the soils before imposing the drying and rewetting cycles and/or adding the substrate. We conclude that cover crops may enhance the ability of the soil microbial community to adapt to drought events and mitigate the impact of warming, possibly due to the provision of labile organic carbon for the synthesis of osmolytes which then prime the decomposition of labile plant material upon rewetting.

Abstract Image

增温和覆盖作物对土壤微生物功能对反复干湿循环响应的影响
土壤对极端天气事件的反应在未来将变得越来越重要,因为预计气候变化将导致更频繁和更严重的洪水和干旱使土壤遭受干燥和再湿循环。这些极端事件将在全球变暖的背景下发生。农民正在采用覆盖种植作为一种可持续的管理做法,以增加土壤有机质,有利于土壤健康。覆盖作物还可以增强土壤的恢复力,帮助减轻气候变化的影响。我们研究了增温作物和覆盖作物对土壤微生物功能对反复干燥和再湿循环的响应的影响。我们在一个田间小区试验中引入了开顶室来加热土壤表面,在收获后的夏季种植覆盖作物(单种单栽培和4种多栽培),然后在谷物轮作中种植秋播经济作物。在春季收获谷类作物之前,从试验田的温暖地区和周围地区收集土壤样本。增温显著增加,覆盖作物显著减少,真菌β -葡萄糖苷酶基因丰度显著增加。我们量化了呼吸作用(测量土壤微生物功能的一种方法),在实验室进行了0、1、2、4或8次干湿循环,并以10 mg g - 1的速率添加了大麦草粉基质。我们观察到,在以前种植覆盖作物混合的土壤中,累积底物诱导的呼吸比在单一栽培中种植的同一物种的平均预期要低。反复的干燥和再湿循环增加了观察到的累积底物诱导的呼吸速率,表明反复的扰动选择了一个适应更快地处理大麦芽粉的群落。当我们计算8个干湿循环后的累积呼吸,相对于0个干湿循环后的累积呼吸(我们推断这代表了微生物群落对重复干湿循环的适应程度),我们的数据显示,变暖的遗产显著降低了土壤微生物群落的适应,但覆盖作物的遗产显著增加了土壤微生物群落的适应。土壤微生物群落的这种适应性与土壤中水可提取有机碳的浓度呈正相关,而在施加干燥和再湿润循环和/或添加基质之前。我们得出结论,覆盖作物可能会增强土壤微生物群落适应干旱事件和减轻变暖影响的能力,这可能是由于为渗透物的合成提供了稳定的有机碳,然后在再湿润时为稳定的植物物质的分解提供了条件。
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来源期刊
European Journal of Soil Science
European Journal of Soil Science 农林科学-土壤科学
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
4.80%
发文量
117
审稿时长
5 months
期刊介绍: The EJSS is an international journal that publishes outstanding papers in soil science that advance the theoretical and mechanistic understanding of physical, chemical and biological processes and their interactions in soils acting from molecular to continental scales in natural and managed environments.
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