Negative effects of elevated ozone levels on soil microbial characteristics: a meta-analysis

IF 3.9 2区 农林科学 Q1 AGRONOMY
Xiaofei Lu, Jie Li, Xinyi Zhou, Xu Yue
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background and aims

The effects of elevated tropospheric ozone (O3) concentrations on terrestrial ecosystems have been extensively researched by numerous O3 fumigation experiments and syntheses. While the detrimental impacts of O3 stress on aboveground plant physiological traits are well-documented, there remains a gap in our understanding of how elevated O3 influences soil microbes and plant–microbe interactions.

Methods

Here, we synthesized data from 71 O3 fumigation experiments conducted globally to evaluate the effects of elevated O3 on soil microbial characteristics, including biomass, community composition, and extracellular enzyme activities (EEAs).

Results

Elevated O3 led to an average reduction of 14.2% in microbial biomass carbon (MBC). It was largely attributable to decreased plant carbon input, as the effect size of MBC was closely correlated with declines in both aboveground and root biomass. Fungal communities appeared more vulnerable to O3 stress than bacterial communities, as evidenced by a 10.7% decrease in fungal phospholipid fatty acids (PLFAs), while total and bacterial PLFAs were only marginally affected. Furthermore, the negative impacts on microbes intensified with increasing O3 concentrations but tended to diminish over time. In addition, elevated O3 significantly reduced hydrolytic EEAs, which target simple compounds, by 12.9%, while increasing oxidative EEAs, which degrade recalcitrant compounds, by 12.0%. It suggests that O3 stress would affect the decomposition of soil organic matter by shifting EEAs.

Conclusion

Elevated O3 impairs soil microbial growth and changes microbial C utilization strategies, which could profoundly impact C cycling in terrestrial ecosystems.

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来源期刊
Plant and Soil
Plant and Soil 农林科学-农艺学
CiteScore
8.20
自引率
8.20%
发文量
543
审稿时长
2.5 months
期刊介绍: Plant and Soil publishes original papers and review articles exploring the interface of plant biology and soil sciences, and that enhance our mechanistic understanding of plant-soil interactions. We focus on the interface of plant biology and soil sciences, and seek those manuscripts with a strong mechanistic component which develop and test hypotheses aimed at understanding underlying mechanisms of plant-soil interactions. Manuscripts can include both fundamental and applied aspects of mineral nutrition, plant water relations, symbiotic and pathogenic plant-microbe interactions, root anatomy and morphology, soil biology, ecology, agrochemistry and agrophysics, as long as they are hypothesis-driven and enhance our mechanistic understanding. Articles including a major molecular or modelling component also fall within the scope of the journal. All contributions appear in the English language, with consistent spelling, using either American or British English.
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