H. Jonsson, G. Blume-Werry, A. A. Wackett, J. Olofsson, E. Arvidsson, T. Sparrman, J. Klaminder
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Here we experimentally tested how earthworms known to be non-native to arctic ecosystems (Aporrectodea spp. and Lumbricus spp.) affect C reservoirs in soil and plants (above and belowground separately) in two common tundra vegetation types (heath and meadow). Earthworms lowered the mean SOC pool and substantially altered SOC quality in meadow soils by increasing the proportion of aromatic-C compounds. Simultaneously, earthworms increased the C pool stored in plant biomass, which counteracted earthworm-induced SOC losses in meadow ecosystems. A positive earthworm effect on belowground biomass in heath soil facilitated a net ecosystem uptake of ∼0.84 kg C m<sup>−2</sup> over the 4-year study period. The higher C uptake into plant biomass in the heath resulted in a notable increase of SOC but lower δ<sup>13</sup>C values, likely because of recently captured C being sourced from roots or litter. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
蚯蚓作为腐食动物,在土壤有机碳(SOC)的分解中起着重要作用。因此,将非本地蚯蚓引入北极生态系统引起了人们对它们可能对世界上最大的有机碳储存库之一产生潜在影响的担忧。蚯蚓还可能对植物生产力产生相当大的影响,而且缺乏量化它们对土壤和植物中碳(C)库的影响的实验研究,这使得很难预测蚯蚓对生态系统碳储存的影响。在这里,我们通过实验测试了已知的北极生态系统的非原生蚯蚓(Aporrectodea spp.和Lumbricus spp.)如何影响两种常见苔原植被类型(荒地和草甸)中土壤和植物(地上和地下分别)中的C库。蚯蚓通过增加芳香型碳化合物的比例,降低了草甸土壤的平均有机碳库,并显著改变了土壤的有机碳质量。同时,蚯蚓增加了植物生物量中的C库,抵消了蚯蚓引起的草甸生态系统有机碳损失。在4年的研究期间,蚯蚓对健康土壤地下生物量的积极影响促进了生态系统对~ 0.84 kg cm - 2的净吸收。高碳吸收导致有机碳显著增加,δ13C值降低,这可能是由于最近捕获的碳来自根或凋落物。通过对植物、蚯蚓和土壤之间植被特异性反馈的观察,我们进一步了解了非本地蚯蚓对高纬度生态系统有机碳动态和碳收支的影响。
Non-Native Earthworms Alter Carbon Sequestration in Arctic Tundra Ecosystems
Earthworms, as detritivores, play a significant role in breaking down soil organic carbon (SOC). The introduction of non-native earthworms to arctic ecosystems has, therefore, raised concerns about the potential impact they may have on one of the world's largest SOC reservoirs. Earthworms could also have considerable effects on plant productivity, and the lack of experimental studies quantifying their impact on carbon (C) reservoirs in both soil and plants makes it difficult to predict the effect of earthworms on ecosystem C storage. Here we experimentally tested how earthworms known to be non-native to arctic ecosystems (Aporrectodea spp. and Lumbricus spp.) affect C reservoirs in soil and plants (above and belowground separately) in two common tundra vegetation types (heath and meadow). Earthworms lowered the mean SOC pool and substantially altered SOC quality in meadow soils by increasing the proportion of aromatic-C compounds. Simultaneously, earthworms increased the C pool stored in plant biomass, which counteracted earthworm-induced SOC losses in meadow ecosystems. A positive earthworm effect on belowground biomass in heath soil facilitated a net ecosystem uptake of ∼0.84 kg C m−2 over the 4-year study period. The higher C uptake into plant biomass in the heath resulted in a notable increase of SOC but lower δ13C values, likely because of recently captured C being sourced from roots or litter. Our observations of vegetation-specific feedbacks between plants, earthworms, and soils advance our understanding of non-native earthworms' impact on SOC dynamics and C budgets in high-latitude ecosystems.
期刊介绍:
JGR-Biogeosciences focuses on biogeosciences of the Earth system in the past, present, and future and the extension of this research to planetary studies. The emerging field of biogeosciences spans the intellectual interface between biology and the geosciences and attempts to understand the functions of the Earth system across multiple spatial and temporal scales. Studies in biogeosciences may use multiple lines of evidence drawn from diverse fields to gain a holistic understanding of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine ecosystems and extreme environments. Specific topics within the scope of the section include process-based theoretical, experimental, and field studies of biogeochemistry, biogeophysics, atmosphere-, land-, and ocean-ecosystem interactions, biomineralization, life in extreme environments, astrobiology, microbial processes, geomicrobiology, and evolutionary geobiology