Title
Annual to decadal temperature adaptation of the soil bacterial community after translocation across an elevation gradient in the Andes
Date Issued
01 July 2021
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Elsevier Ltd
Abstract
The response of soil microbial activity to climate warming has been predicted to have a large destabilising effect on the carbon cycle. However, the nature of this feedback remains poorly understood, especially in tropical ecosystems and across annual to decadal timescales. We studied the response of bacterial community growth to 2 and 11 years of altered temperature regimes, by translocating soil across an elevation gradient in the tropical Andes. Soil cores were reciprocally translocated among five sites across 3 km in elevation, where mean annual temperature (MAT) ranged from 26.4 to 6.5°C. The bacterial community growth response to temperature was estimated using a temperature Sensitivity Index (SI): the log-ratio of growth determined by leucine incorporation at 35°C: 4°C. Bacterial communities from soil translocated to their original site (controls) had a growth response assumed to be ‘adapted’ to the original MAT. Translocating soil downslope (warming) resulted in an increased SI relative to their original growth response, and vice versa under cooling, indicating community-level adaptation over the incubation period to the altered MAT. The average level of adaptation (i.e., the extent to which SI converged on the control values) was 77% after 2 years, and was complete after 11 years. The adaptive response was faster when soil was warmed rather than cooled: instances of complete adaptation of SI occurred in soils after 2 years when warmed, but only after 11 years when they were cooled. Taken together, our results show that the majority of the growth adaptation to warming by the bacterial community occurs rapidly, within 2 years, whilst growth adaptation to cooling occurs within a decade. Our analysis demonstrates rapid warm-adaptation of bacterial community growth, with potential consequences for the temperature sensitivity of soil carbon cycling in response to future climate warming.
Volume
158
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología celular, Microbiología
Investigación climática
Ciencia del suelo
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85105251492
Source
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
ISSN of the container
00380717
Sponsor(s)
This study was led with support from the UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) , NE/G018278/1 and NE/D01185X/1 to PM and also by an Australian Research Council (ARC) grant DP170104091 to PM, a NERC studentship NE/K500835/1 and an additional grant from Derek and Maureen Moss to LCH, and a European Union Marie-Curie Fellowship FP7-2012-329360 to ATN. We thank our Peruvian program led by NS, including CONCYTEC/FONDECYT through contract 116-2016 . We thank the Asociación para la Conservación de la Cuenca Amazónica (ACCA) in Cusco and the Instituto Nacional de Recursos Naturales (INRENA) in Lima for access to the study sites. For their logistical support we thank Dr. Eric Cosio and Eliana Esparza Ballón at Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP). For field support we thank Walter H. Huasco and Adan J. Q. Ccahuana. This study an output of the Andes Biodiversity and Ecosystem Research Group consortium ( www.andesconservation.org ) and part of LUCCI (Lund University Centre for studies of Carbon Cycle and Climate Interactions).
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus