Soil enzymes in response to climate warming: mechanisms and feedbacks
SAUVADET, Marie
Fonctionnement écologique et gestion durable des agrosystèmes bananiers et ananas [UR GECO]
Département Performances des systèmes de production et de transformation tropicaux [Cirad-PERSYST]
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Fonctionnement écologique et gestion durable des agrosystèmes bananiers et ananas [UR GECO]
Département Performances des systèmes de production et de transformation tropicaux [Cirad-PERSYST]
SAUVADET, Marie
Fonctionnement écologique et gestion durable des agrosystèmes bananiers et ananas [UR GECO]
Département Performances des systèmes de production et de transformation tropicaux [Cirad-PERSYST]
Fonctionnement écologique et gestion durable des agrosystèmes bananiers et ananas [UR GECO]
Département Performances des systèmes de production et de transformation tropicaux [Cirad-PERSYST]
BERNARD, Laëtitia
Ecologie fonctionnelle et biogéochimie des sols et des agro-écosystèmes [UMR Eco&Sols]
Ecologie fonctionnelle et biogéochimie des sols et des agro-écosystèmes [UMR Eco&Sols]
BERTRAND, Isabelle
Ecologie fonctionnelle et biogéochimie des sols et des agro-écosystèmes [UMR Eco&Sols]
Ecologie fonctionnelle et biogéochimie des sols et des agro-écosystèmes [UMR Eco&Sols]
BLAGODATSKAYA, Evgenia
Helmholtz Zentrum für Umweltforschung = Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research [UFZ]
People's Friendship University of Russia [Moscow] = Rossijskij universitet družby narodov [Moskva] [RUDN University]
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Helmholtz Zentrum für Umweltforschung = Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research [UFZ]
People's Friendship University of Russia [Moscow] = Rossijskij universitet družby narodov [Moskva] [RUDN University]
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Functional Ecology. 2022
Wiley
English Abstract
Soil enzymes are central to ecosystem processes because they mediate numerous reactions that are essential in biogeochemical cycles. However, how soil enzyme activities will respond to global warming is uncertain. We ...Read more >
Soil enzymes are central to ecosystem processes because they mediate numerous reactions that are essential in biogeochemical cycles. However, how soil enzyme activities will respond to global warming is uncertain. We reviewed the literature on mechanisms linking temperature effects on soil enzymes and microbial communities, and outlined a conceptual overview on how these changes may influence soil carbon fluxes in terrestrial ecosystems. At the enzyme scale, although temperature can have a positive effect on enzymatic catalytic power in the short term (i.e. via the instantaneous response of activity), this effect can be countered over time by enzyme inactivation and reduced substrate affinity. At the microbial scale, short-term warming can increase enzymatic catalytic power via accelerated synthesis and microbial turnover, but shifts in microbial community composition and growth efficiency may mediate the effect of warming in the long term. Although increasing enzyme activities may accelerate labile carbon decomposition over months to years, our literature review highlights that this initial stage can be followed by the following phases: (a) a reduction in soil carbon loss, due to changing carbon use efficiency among communities or substrate depletion, which together can decrease microbial biomass and enzyme activity and (b) an acceleration of soil carbon loss, due to shifts in microbial community structure and greater allocation to oxidative enzymes for recalcitrant carbon degradation. Studies that bridge scales in time and space are required to assess whether there will be an attenuation or acceleration of soil carbon loss through changes in enzyme activities in the very long term. We conclude that soil enzymes determine the sensitivity of soil carbon to warming, but that the microbial community and enzymatic traits that mediate this effect change over time. Improving representation of enzymes in soil carbon models requires long-term studies that characterize the response of wide-ranging hydrolytic and oxidative enzymatic traits-catalytic power, kinetics, inactivation-and the microbial community responses that govern enzyme synthesis. Read the free Plain Language Summary for this article on the Journal blog.Read less <
English Keywords
carbon storage
carbon use efficiency
climate change
microbial ecology
soil extracellular enzymes
temperature sensitivity
ANR Project
CARbone, Traits fonctionnels associés, et leur OptimisatioN
Origin
Hal imported