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Soil warming increases the number of growing bacterial taxa but not their growth rates.

Dennis MetzeJoerg SchneckerColine Le Noir de CarlanBiplabi BhattaraiErik VerbrugggenIvika OstonenIvan A JanssensBjarni D SigurdssonBela HausmannChristina KaiserAndreas Richter
Published in: Science advances (2024)
Soil microorganisms control the fate of soil organic carbon. Warming may accelerate their activities putting large carbon stocks at risk of decomposition. Existing knowledge about microbial responses to warming is based on community-level measurements, leaving the underlying mechanisms unexplored and hindering predictions. In a long-term soil warming experiment in a Subarctic grassland, we investigated how active populations of bacteria and archaea responded to elevated soil temperatures (+6°C) and the influence of plant roots, by measuring taxon-specific growth rates using quantitative stable isotope probing and 18 O water vapor equilibration. Contrary to prior assumptions, increased community growth was associated with a greater number of active bacterial taxa rather than generally faster-growing populations. We also found that root presence enhanced bacterial growth at ambient temperatures but not at elevated temperatures, indicating a shift in plant-microbe interactions. Our results, thus, reveal a mechanism of how soil bacteria respond to warming that cannot be inferred from community-level measurements.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • plant growth
  • mental health
  • air pollution
  • microbial community
  • high resolution
  • dna methylation