Biotic and abiotic drivers of soil microbial functions across tree diversity experiments
- Author
- Simone Cesarz, Dylan Craven, Harald Auge, Helge Bruelheide, Bastien Castagneyrol, Andy Hector, Hervé Jactel, Julia Koricheva, Christian Messier, Bart Muys, Michael J. O’Brien, Alain Paquette, Quentin Ponette, Catherine Potvin, Peter B. Reich, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen, Andrew R Smith, Kris Verheyen (UGent) and Nico Eisenhauer
- Organization
- Abstract
- Aim Soil microorganisms are essential for the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. Although soil microbial communities and functions may be linked to the tree species composition and diversity of forests, there has been no comprehensive study of how general potential relationships are and if these are context-dependent. A global network of tree diversity experiments (TreeDivNet) allows for a first examination of tree diversity-soil microbial function relationships across environmental gradients. Location Global Major Taxa Studied Soil microorganisms Methods Soil samples collected from eleven tree diversity experiments in four biomes across four continents were used to measure soil basal respiration, microbial biomass, and carbon use efficiency using the substrate-induced respiration method. All samples were measured using the same analytical device in the same laboratory to prevent measurement bias. We used linear mixed-effects models to examine the effects of tree species diversity, environmental conditions, and their interactions on soil microbial functions. Results Across biodiversity experiments, abiotic drivers, mainly soil water content, significantly increased soil microbial functions. Potential evapotranspiration (PET) increased, whereas soil C-to-N ratio (CN) decreased soil microbial functions under dry soil conditions, but high soil water content reduced the importance of other abiotic drivers. Tree species richness and phylogenetic diversity had overall similar, but weak and context-dependent (climate, soil abiotic variables) effects on soil microbial respiration. Positive tree diversity effects on soil microbial respiration were most pronounced at low PET, low soil CN, and high tree density. Soil microbial functions increased with the age of the experiment. Main conclusions Our results point at the importance of soil water content for maintaining high levels of soil microbial functions and modulating effects of other environmental drivers. Moreover, overall tree diversity effects on soil microbial functions seem to be negligible in the short term (experiments were 1-18 years old). However, context-dependent tree diversity effects (climate, soil abiotic variables) have greater importance at high tree density, and significant effects of experimental age call for longer-term studies. Such systematic insights are key to better integrate soil carbon dynamics into the management of afforestation projects across environmental contexts, as today’s reforestation efforts remain focused largely on aboveground carbon storage and are still dominated by less diverse forests stands of commercial species.
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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8649733
- MLA
- Cesarz, Simone, et al. “Biotic and Abiotic Drivers of Soil Microbial Functions across Tree Diversity Experiments.” BIORXIV, 2020, doi:10.1101/2020.01.30.927277.
- APA
- Cesarz, S., Craven, D., Auge, H., Bruelheide, H., Castagneyrol, B., Hector, A., … Eisenhauer, N. (2020). Biotic and abiotic drivers of soil microbial functions across tree diversity experiments. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.30.927277
- Chicago author-date
- Cesarz, Simone, Dylan Craven, Harald Auge, Helge Bruelheide, Bastien Castagneyrol, Andy Hector, Hervé Jactel, et al. 2020. “Biotic and Abiotic Drivers of Soil Microbial Functions across Tree Diversity Experiments.” BIORXIV. https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.30.927277.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Cesarz, Simone, Dylan Craven, Harald Auge, Helge Bruelheide, Bastien Castagneyrol, Andy Hector, Hervé Jactel, Julia Koricheva, Christian Messier, Bart Muys, Michael J. O’Brien, Alain Paquette, Quentin Ponette, Catherine Potvin, Peter B. Reich, Michael Scherer-Lorenzen, Andrew R Smith, Kris Verheyen, and Nico Eisenhauer. 2020. “Biotic and Abiotic Drivers of Soil Microbial Functions across Tree Diversity Experiments.” BIORXIV. doi:10.1101/2020.01.30.927277.
- Vancouver
- 1.Cesarz S, Craven D, Auge H, Bruelheide H, Castagneyrol B, Hector A, et al. Biotic and abiotic drivers of soil microbial functions across tree diversity experiments. BIORXIV. 2020.
- IEEE
- [1]S. Cesarz et al., “Biotic and abiotic drivers of soil microbial functions across tree diversity experiments,” BIORXIV. 2020.
@misc{8649733, abstract = {{Aim Soil microorganisms are essential for the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. Although soil microbial communities and functions may be linked to the tree species composition and diversity of forests, there has been no comprehensive study of how general potential relationships are and if these are context-dependent. A global network of tree diversity experiments (TreeDivNet) allows for a first examination of tree diversity-soil microbial function relationships across environmental gradients. Location Global Major Taxa Studied Soil microorganisms Methods Soil samples collected from eleven tree diversity experiments in four biomes across four continents were used to measure soil basal respiration, microbial biomass, and carbon use efficiency using the substrate-induced respiration method. All samples were measured using the same analytical device in the same laboratory to prevent measurement bias. We used linear mixed-effects models to examine the effects of tree species diversity, environmental conditions, and their interactions on soil microbial functions. Results Across biodiversity experiments, abiotic drivers, mainly soil water content, significantly increased soil microbial functions. Potential evapotranspiration (PET) increased, whereas soil C-to-N ratio (CN) decreased soil microbial functions under dry soil conditions, but high soil water content reduced the importance of other abiotic drivers. Tree species richness and phylogenetic diversity had overall similar, but weak and context-dependent (climate, soil abiotic variables) effects on soil microbial respiration. Positive tree diversity effects on soil microbial respiration were most pronounced at low PET, low soil CN, and high tree density. Soil microbial functions increased with the age of the experiment. Main conclusions Our results point at the importance of soil water content for maintaining high levels of soil microbial functions and modulating effects of other environmental drivers. Moreover, overall tree diversity effects on soil microbial functions seem to be negligible in the short term (experiments were 1-18 years old). However, context-dependent tree diversity effects (climate, soil abiotic variables) have greater importance at high tree density, and significant effects of experimental age call for longer-term studies. Such systematic insights are key to better integrate soil carbon dynamics into the management of afforestation projects across environmental contexts, as today’s reforestation efforts remain focused largely on aboveground carbon storage and are still dominated by less diverse forests stands of commercial species.}}, author = {{Cesarz, Simone and Craven, Dylan and Auge, Harald and Bruelheide, Helge and Castagneyrol, Bastien and Hector, Andy and Jactel, Hervé and Koricheva, Julia and Messier, Christian and Muys, Bart and O’Brien, Michael J. and Paquette, Alain and Ponette, Quentin and Potvin, Catherine and Reich, Peter B. and Scherer-Lorenzen, Michael and Smith, Andrew R and Verheyen, Kris and Eisenhauer, Nico}}, language = {{eng}}, series = {{BIORXIV}}, title = {{Biotic and abiotic drivers of soil microbial functions across tree diversity experiments}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.30.927277}}, year = {{2020}}, }
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