Abstract

Abstract. Microbial food webs are critical for efficient nutrient turnover providing the basis for functional and stable ecosystems. However, the successional development of such microbial food webs and their role in "young" ecosystems is unclear. Due to a continuous glacier retreat since the middle of the 19th century, glacier forefields have expanded offering an excellent opportunity to study food web dynamics in soils at different developmental stages. In the present study, litter degradation and the corresponding C fluxes into microbial communities were investigated along the forefield of the Damma glacier (Switzerland). 13C-enriched litter of the pioneering plant Leucanthemopsis alpina (L.) Heywood was incorporated into the soil at sites that have been free from ice for approximately 10, 60, 100 and more than 700 years. The structure and function of microbial communities were identified by 13C analysis of phospholipid fatty acids (PLFA) and phospholipid ether lipids (PLEL). Results showed increasing microbial diversity and biomass, and enhanced proliferation of bacterial groups as ecosystem development progressed. Initially, litter decomposition proceeded faster at the more developed sites, but at the end of the experiment loss of litter mass was similar at all sites, once the more easily-degradable litter fraction was processed. As a result incorporation of 13C into microbial biomass was more evident during the first weeks of litter decomposition. 13C enrichments of both PLEL and PLFA biomarkers following litter incorporation were observed at all sites, suggesting similar microbial foodwebs at all stages of soil development. Nonetheless, the contribution of bacteria, especially actinomycetes to litter turnover became more pronounced as soil age increased in detriment of archaea, fungi and protozoa, more prominent in recently deglaciated terrain.

Highlights

  • Glaciers are retreating in many mountainous areas of the world due to global warming (Oerlemans, 2005) leaving behind new terrestrial habitats that are colonized by organisms (Bardgett et al, 2007)

  • Litter degradation and the corresponding C fluxes into microbial communities were investigated along the forefield of the Damma glacier (Switzerland). 13C-enriched litter of the pioneering plant Leucanthemopsis alpina (L.) Heywood was incorporated into the soil at sites that have been free from ice for approximately 10, 60, 100 and more than 700 years

  • Of the applied plant litter was lost at T1, whereas approximately 65 % of the litter material was degraded at the other sites

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Summary

Introduction

Glaciers are retreating in many mountainous areas of the world due to global warming (Oerlemans, 2005) leaving behind new terrestrial habitats that are colonized by organisms (Bardgett et al, 2007). This is usually a gradual process that results in a chronosequence. Parent materials become exposed and physical and biogeochemical weathering convert primary minerals to secondary minerals releasing plant nutrient elements in soluble forms. As substrate colonization by plants and microorganisms occurs, organic material starts to accumulate that can be further transformed; as a result complex food

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