Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria.
BackgroundIn a warmer world, microbial decomposition of previously frozen organic carbon (C) is one of the most likely positive climate feedbacks of permafrost regions to the atmosphere. However, mechanistic understanding of microbial mediation on chemically recalcitrant C instability is limited; th...
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ftcdlib:oai:escholarship.org/ark:/13030/qt8993n5xz 2023-05-15T15:11:21+02:00 Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. Tao, Xuanyu Feng, Jiajie Yang, Yunfeng Wang, Gangsheng Tian, Renmao Fan, Fenliang Ning, Daliang Bates, Colin T Hale, Lauren Yuan, Mengting M Wu, Linwei Gao, Qun Lei, Jiesi Schuur, Edward AG Yu, Julian Bracho, Rosvel Luo, Yiqi Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T Johnston, Eric R Cole, James R Penton, C Ryan Tiedje, James M Zhou, Jizhong 84 2020-06-05 application/pdf https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8993n5xz unknown eScholarship, University of California qt8993n5xz https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8993n5xz public Microbiome, vol 8, iss 1 Burkholderia Proteobacteria Lignin Soil Soil Microbiology Alaska Hot Temperature Climate Change Tundra Permafrost Ecology Microbiology Medical Microbiology article 2020 ftcdlib 2021-03-11T09:12:43Z BackgroundIn a warmer world, microbial decomposition of previously frozen organic carbon (C) is one of the most likely positive climate feedbacks of permafrost regions to the atmosphere. However, mechanistic understanding of microbial mediation on chemically recalcitrant C instability is limited; thus, it is crucial to identify and evaluate active decomposers of chemically recalcitrant C, which is essential for predicting C-cycle feedbacks and their relative strength of influence on climate change. Using stable isotope probing of the active layer of Arctic tundra soils after depleting soil labile C through a 975-day laboratory incubation, the identity of microbial decomposers of lignin and, their responses to warming were revealed.ResultsThe β-Proteobacteria genus Burkholderia accounted for 95.1% of total abundance of potential lignin decomposers. Consistently, Burkholderia isolated from our tundra soils could grow with lignin as the sole C source. A 2.2 °C increase of warming considerably increased total abundance and functional capacities of all potential lignin decomposers. In addition to Burkholderia, α-Proteobacteria capable of lignin decomposition (e.g. Bradyrhizobium and Methylobacterium genera) were stimulated by warming by 82-fold. Those community changes collectively doubled the priming effect, i.e., decomposition of existing C after fresh C input to soil. Consequently, warming aggravates soil C instability, as verified by microbially enabled climate-C modeling.ConclusionsOur findings are alarming, which demonstrate that accelerated C decomposition under warming conditions will make tundra soils a larger biospheric C source than anticipated. Video Abstract. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Climate change permafrost Tundra Alaska University of California: eScholarship Arctic |
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Open Polar |
collection |
University of California: eScholarship |
op_collection_id |
ftcdlib |
language |
unknown |
topic |
Burkholderia Proteobacteria Lignin Soil Soil Microbiology Alaska Hot Temperature Climate Change Tundra Permafrost Ecology Microbiology Medical Microbiology |
spellingShingle |
Burkholderia Proteobacteria Lignin Soil Soil Microbiology Alaska Hot Temperature Climate Change Tundra Permafrost Ecology Microbiology Medical Microbiology Tao, Xuanyu Feng, Jiajie Yang, Yunfeng Wang, Gangsheng Tian, Renmao Fan, Fenliang Ning, Daliang Bates, Colin T Hale, Lauren Yuan, Mengting M Wu, Linwei Gao, Qun Lei, Jiesi Schuur, Edward AG Yu, Julian Bracho, Rosvel Luo, Yiqi Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T Johnston, Eric R Cole, James R Penton, C Ryan Tiedje, James M Zhou, Jizhong Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. |
topic_facet |
Burkholderia Proteobacteria Lignin Soil Soil Microbiology Alaska Hot Temperature Climate Change Tundra Permafrost Ecology Microbiology Medical Microbiology |
description |
BackgroundIn a warmer world, microbial decomposition of previously frozen organic carbon (C) is one of the most likely positive climate feedbacks of permafrost regions to the atmosphere. However, mechanistic understanding of microbial mediation on chemically recalcitrant C instability is limited; thus, it is crucial to identify and evaluate active decomposers of chemically recalcitrant C, which is essential for predicting C-cycle feedbacks and their relative strength of influence on climate change. Using stable isotope probing of the active layer of Arctic tundra soils after depleting soil labile C through a 975-day laboratory incubation, the identity of microbial decomposers of lignin and, their responses to warming were revealed.ResultsThe β-Proteobacteria genus Burkholderia accounted for 95.1% of total abundance of potential lignin decomposers. Consistently, Burkholderia isolated from our tundra soils could grow with lignin as the sole C source. A 2.2 °C increase of warming considerably increased total abundance and functional capacities of all potential lignin decomposers. In addition to Burkholderia, α-Proteobacteria capable of lignin decomposition (e.g. Bradyrhizobium and Methylobacterium genera) were stimulated by warming by 82-fold. Those community changes collectively doubled the priming effect, i.e., decomposition of existing C after fresh C input to soil. Consequently, warming aggravates soil C instability, as verified by microbially enabled climate-C modeling.ConclusionsOur findings are alarming, which demonstrate that accelerated C decomposition under warming conditions will make tundra soils a larger biospheric C source than anticipated. Video Abstract. |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Tao, Xuanyu Feng, Jiajie Yang, Yunfeng Wang, Gangsheng Tian, Renmao Fan, Fenliang Ning, Daliang Bates, Colin T Hale, Lauren Yuan, Mengting M Wu, Linwei Gao, Qun Lei, Jiesi Schuur, Edward AG Yu, Julian Bracho, Rosvel Luo, Yiqi Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T Johnston, Eric R Cole, James R Penton, C Ryan Tiedje, James M Zhou, Jizhong |
author_facet |
Tao, Xuanyu Feng, Jiajie Yang, Yunfeng Wang, Gangsheng Tian, Renmao Fan, Fenliang Ning, Daliang Bates, Colin T Hale, Lauren Yuan, Mengting M Wu, Linwei Gao, Qun Lei, Jiesi Schuur, Edward AG Yu, Julian Bracho, Rosvel Luo, Yiqi Konstantinidis, Konstantinos T Johnston, Eric R Cole, James R Penton, C Ryan Tiedje, James M Zhou, Jizhong |
author_sort |
Tao, Xuanyu |
title |
Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. |
title_short |
Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. |
title_full |
Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. |
title_fullStr |
Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Winter warming in Alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by Proteobacteria. |
title_sort |
winter warming in alaska accelerates lignin decomposition contributed by proteobacteria. |
publisher |
eScholarship, University of California |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8993n5xz |
op_coverage |
84 |
geographic |
Arctic |
geographic_facet |
Arctic |
genre |
Arctic Climate change permafrost Tundra Alaska |
genre_facet |
Arctic Climate change permafrost Tundra Alaska |
op_source |
Microbiome, vol 8, iss 1 |
op_relation |
qt8993n5xz https://escholarship.org/uc/item/8993n5xz |
op_rights |
public |
_version_ |
1766342224021291008 |