Abstract

To evaluate the effect of climate change on ecosystem functioning, the temperature and moisture response of microbial C, N, and P transformations during decomposition of Calluna vulgaris (L.) Hull. litter was studied in a laboratory incubation experiment. The litter originated from a dry heathland in the Netherlands where P limited vegetation growth. Fresh litter was incubated at 5, 10, 15, or 20°C and at a moisture content of 50, 100, or 200% in a full factorial design. Microbial nutrient transformations and activity were evaluated during two successive periods: an initial period of 48 days characterized by microbial growth and a second period from 48 to 206 days in which microbial growth declined significantly. Temperature and moisture response of respiration rate, the metabolic quotient (qCO2), C, N, and P immobilization, net N and P mineralization and nitrification rates were evaluated by performing linear regressions. Microbial nutrient transformations and microbial activity depended both on temperature and moisture. In the first period, the respiration rate, qCO2, microbial C and N immobilization, net P mineralization, net N mineralization and net nitrification rates were more strongly affected by temperature, while the microbial P immobilization rate was more strongly affected by moisture. The respiration rate, qCO2, P immobilization rate, net P and N mineralization rate, and nitrification rate increased with temperature and moisture, while the C and N immobilization rate decreased with increasing temperature and increased with moisture. In the second period, C, N, and P immobilization and net N and P mineralization rates were significantly lower. The respiration rate and qCO2 continued to increase with temperature and moisture, but C and N immobilization rates increased with temperature and declined with increasing moisture. Net P mineralization rate decreased at higher temperature and moisture, and nitrification rate declined with increasing temperature and increased with moisture. It was concluded that plant growth in these P-limited systems is very sensitive to climate change as it strongly relies on the competition for P with microbes, and temperature and moisture have a large effect on the immobilization rate of available P.

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