Abstract

Soil trophic networks are key to biogeochemical cycles, in particular decomposition. However, few studies have yet quantified how microbial decomposition activity along environmental gradients is jointly driven by bacteria, fungi, and their respective consumers. Here, we quantified these direct and indirect effects on decomposition and contrasted them between forests and open habitats using multiple elevational gradients in the French Alps.While environmental control on microbial decomposition activity was comparable in the two habitats, the pathways and strengths of biotic predictors strongly differed. The fungal channel composition played a moderate role in forests, while the bacterial channel composition was critical in open habitats. Importantly, we found trophic regulation by consumers to be a key modulator of the direct environmental effects on decomposition in open habitats. These results highlight the need to integrate trophic regulation when predicting future ecosystem functioning.

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