Abstract

Temperature regulates the rate of biogeochemical cycles. One way it does so is through control of microbial metabolism. Warming effects on metabolism change with time as physiology adjusts to the new temperature. I here propose that such thermal adaptation is observed in soil microbial respiration and growth, as the result of universal evolutionary trade-offs between the structure and function of both enzymes and membranes. I review the basis for these trade-offs and show that they, like substrate depletion, are plausible mechanisms explaining soil respiration responses to warming. I argue that controversies over whether soil microbes adapt to warming stem from disregarding the evolutionary physiology of cellular metabolism, and confusion arising from the term thermal acclimation to represent phenomena at the organism- and ecosystem-levels with different underlying mechanisms. Measurable physiological adjustments of the soil microbial biomass reflect shifts from colder- to warmer-adapted taxa. Hypothesized declines in the growth efficiency of soil microbial biomass under warming are controversial given limited data and a weak theoretical basis. I suggest that energy spilling (aka waste metabolism) is a more plausible mechanism for efficiency declines than the commonly invoked increase in maintenance-energy demands. Energy spilling has many fitness benefits for microbes and its response to climate warming is uncertain. Modeled responses of soil carbon to warming are sensitive to microbial growth efficiency, but declines in efficiency mitigate warming-induced carbon losses in microbial models and exacerbate them in conventional models. Both modeling structures assume that microbes regulate soil carbon turnover, highlighting the need for a third structure where microbes are not regulators. I conclude that microbial physiology must be considered if we are to have confidence in projected feedbacks between soil carbon stocks, atmospheric CO2, and climate change.

Highlights

  • Thermal adaptation of decomposer communities in warming soilsTemperature regulates the rate of biogeochemical cycles

  • CLIMATE-CARBON CYCLE FEEDBACKS Respiration emits ∼120 Pg C-CO2 per year from a terrestrial biosphere store of >2,000 Pg C to an atmospheric store of ∼750 Pg C-CO2 (Steffen et al, 1998; Falkowski et al, 2000; Jobbágy and Jackson, 2000; Denman et al, 2007)

  • Thermal adaptation of organism respiration and growth rates should occur through fundamental evolutionary trade-offs in cellular physiology, such as between the structure and function of both enzymes and membranes

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Summary

Thermal adaptation of decomposer communities in warming soils

Temperature regulates the rate of biogeochemical cycles One way it does so is through control of microbial metabolism. I review the basis for these trade-offs and show that they, like substrate depletion, are plausible mechanisms explaining soil respiration responses to warming. Modeled responses of soil carbon to warming are sensitive to microbial growth efficiency, but declines in efficiency mitigate warming-induced carbon losses in microbial models and exacerbate them in conventional models. Both modeling structures assume that microbes regulate soil carbon turnover, highlighting the need for a third structure where microbes are not regulators.

INTRODUCTION
WHAT IS THERMAL ACCLIMATION?
CONCLUSIONS
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