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Effects of drought and recovery on soil volatile organic compound fluxes in an experimental rainforest.

Giovanni PuglieseJohannes IngrischLaura K MeredithEva Y PfannerstillThomas KlüpfelKathiravan MeeranJoseph ByronGemma PurserJuliana Gil-LoaizaJoost van HarenKaterina M DontsovaJuergen KreuzwieserS Nemiah LaddChristiane WernerJonathan Williams
Published in: Nature communications (2023)
Drought can affect the capacity of soils to emit and consume biogenic volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Here we show the impact of prolonged drought followed by rewetting and recovery on soil VOC fluxes in an experimental rainforest. Under wet conditions the rainforest soil acts as a net VOC sink, in particular for isoprenoids, carbonyls and alcohols. The sink capacity progressively decreases during drought, and at soil moistures below ~19%, the soil becomes a source of several VOCs. Position specific 13 C-pyruvate labeling experiments reveal that soil microbes are responsible for the emissions and that the VOC production is higher during drought. Soil rewetting induces a rapid and short abiotic emission peak of carbonyl compounds, and a slow and long biotic emission peak of sulfur-containing compounds. Results show that, the extended drought periods predicted for tropical rainforest regions will strongly affect soil VOC fluxes thereby impacting atmospheric chemistry and climate.
Keyphrases
  • plant growth
  • climate change
  • arabidopsis thaliana
  • heat stress
  • heavy metals
  • dna methylation
  • air pollution
  • mass spectrometry
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification