Ecological networks of dissolved organic matter and microorganisms under global change

Microbes regulate the composition and turnover of organic matter. Here we developed a framework called Energy-Diversity-Trait integrative Analysis to quantify how dissolved organic matter and microbes interact along global change drivers of temperature and nutrient enrichment. Negative and positive...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Nature Communications
Main Authors: Hu, Ang, Choi, Mira, Tanentzap, Andrew J., Liu, Jinfu, Jang, Kyoung-Soon, Lennon, Jay T., Liu, Yongqin, Soininen, Janne, Lu, Xiancai, Zhang, Yunlin, Shen, Ji, Wang, Jianjun
Other Authors: Department of Geosciences and Geography, Biosciences, Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Science (HELSUS)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2022
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10138/347754
Description
Summary:Microbes regulate the composition and turnover of organic matter. Here we developed a framework called Energy-Diversity-Trait integrative Analysis to quantify how dissolved organic matter and microbes interact along global change drivers of temperature and nutrient enrichment. Negative and positive interactions suggest decomposition and production processes of organic matter, respectively. We applied this framework to manipulative field experiments on mountainsides in subarctic and subtropical climates. In both climates, negative interactions of bipartite networks were more specialized than positive interactions, showing fewer interactions between chemical molecules and bacterial taxa. Nutrient enrichment promoted specialization of positive interactions, but decreased specialization of negative interactions, indicating that organic matter was more vulnerable to decomposition by a greater range of bacteria, particularly at warmer temperatures in the subtropical climate. These two global change drivers influenced specialization of negative interactions most strongly via molecular traits, while molecular traits and bacterial diversity similarly affected specialization of positive interactions. Microbes are intimately linked with the fate of organic matter. Here the authors develop an ecological network framework and show how microbes and dissolved organic matter interact along global change drivers of temperature and nutrient enrichment via manipulative field experiments on mountains. Peer reviewed