Abstract

Increasing temperatures have been shown to impact soil biogeochemical processes, although the corresponding changes to the underlying microbial functional communities are not well understood. Alterations in the nitrogen (N) cycling functional component are particularly important as N availability can affect microbial decomposition rates of soil organic matter and influence plant productivity. To assess changes in the microbial component responsible for these changes, the composition of the N-fixing (nifH), and denitrifying (nirS, nirK, nosZ) soil microbial communities was assessed by targeted pyrosequencing of functional genes involved in N cycling in two major biomes where the experimental effect of climate warming is under investigation, a tallgrass prairie in Oklahoma (OK) and the active layer above permafrost in Alaska (AK). Raw reads were processed for quality, translated with frameshift correction, and a total of 313,842 amino acid sequences were clustered and linked to a nearest neighbor using reference datasets. The number of OTUs recovered ranged from 231 (NifH) to 862 (NirK). The N functional microbial communities of the prairie, which had experienced a decade of experimental warming were the most affected with changes in the richness and/or overall structure of NifH, NirS, NirK and NosZ. In contrast, the AK permafrost communities, which had experienced only 1 year of warming, showed decreased richness and a structural change only with the nirK-harboring bacterial community. A highly divergent nirK-harboring bacterial community was identified in the permafrost soils, suggesting much novelty, while other N functional communities exhibited similar relatedness to the reference databases, regardless of site. Prairie and permafrost soils also harbored highly divergent communities due mostly to differing major populations.

Highlights

  • Microbial communities mediate positive feedback mechanisms to warming of the Earth’s climate due to their decomposition of organic carbon (CO2, CH4) and nitrogen cycling (N2O)

  • Our results suggested that N functional gene-harboring bacterial richness and overall composition were most affected in the tallgrass prairie soils after 10 years of warming

  • Warming Effects on Diversity and Structure We examined the diversity and composition of denitrifying and nitrogen-fixing microbial communities under experimental warming in Alaskan permafrost and a tallgrass prairie after 1 and 10 years of warming, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Microbial communities mediate positive feedback mechanisms to warming of the Earth’s climate due to their decomposition of organic carbon (CO2, CH4) and nitrogen cycling (N2O). Community responses to warming such as changes in diversity, population size and shifts in functional groups impact carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) cycling pathways and rates. Microbially-mediated decomposition rates are impacted by climate but substrate quality and the composition of the microbial community (Cornelissen, 1996; Aerts, 1997; Berg and McClaugherty, 2007; Parton et al, 2007). Changes in plant community composition and speciesspecific litter chemistry (Norris et al, 2012), as a result of climate change (precipitation/temperature) or nutrient availability, may impact the decomposer community and its responses to the addition or removal of N from the system. By employing different methodological approaches such as qPCR and microbial community profiling techniques, temperature has been shown to significantly impact the size and structure of the denitrifying (Yergeau et al, 2007; Braker et al, 2010; Jung et al, 2011) and diazotrophic (Deslippe et al, 2005) communities

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