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Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland: effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function

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Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland: effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function. / Gavazov, Konstantin; Ingrisch, Johannes; Hasibeder, Roland et al.
In: Science of the Total Environment, 15.07.2017, p. 316-324.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Gavazov, K, Ingrisch, J, Hasibeder, R, Mills, RTE, Buttler, A, Gleixner, G, Pumpanen, J & Bahn, M 2017, 'Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland: effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function', Science of the Total Environment, pp. 316-324. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.010

APA

Gavazov, K., Ingrisch, J., Hasibeder, R., Mills, R. T. E., Buttler, A., Gleixner, G., Pumpanen, J., & Bahn, M. (2017). Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland: effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function. Science of the Total Environment, 316-324. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.010

Vancouver

Gavazov K, Ingrisch J, Hasibeder R, Mills RTE, Buttler A, Gleixner G et al. Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland: effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function. Science of the Total Environment. 2017 Jul 15;316-324. Epub 2017 Mar 6. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.010

Author

Gavazov, Konstantin ; Ingrisch, Johannes ; Hasibeder, Roland et al. / Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland : effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function. In: Science of the Total Environment. 2017 ; pp. 316-324.

Bibtex

@article{a600d939de694a1fafe5bbc8e4f30ece,
title = "Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland: effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function",
abstract = "Abstract Seasonal snow cover provides essential insulation for mountain ecosystems, but expected changes in precipitation patterns and snow cover duration due to global warming can influence the activity of soil microbial communities. In turn, these changes have the potential to create new dynamics of soil organic matter cycling. To assess the effects of experimental snow removal and advanced spring conditions on soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics, and on the biomass and structure of soil microbial communities, we performed an in situ study in a subalpine grassland in the Austrian Alps, in conjunction with soil incubations under controlled conditions. We found substantial winter C-mineralisation and high accumulation of inorganic and organic N in the topsoil, peaking at snowmelt. Soil microbial biomass doubled under the snow, paralleled by a fivefold increase in its C:N ratio, but no apparent change in its bacteria-dominated community structure. Snow removal led to a series of mild freeze-thaw cycles, which had minor effects on in situ soil CO2 production and N mineralisation. Incubated soil under advanced spring conditions, however, revealed an impaired microbial metabolism shortly after snow removal, characterised by a limited capacity for C-mineralisation of both fresh plant-derived substrates and existing soil organic matter (SOM), leading to reduced priming effects. This effect was transient and the observed recovery in microbial respiration and SOM priming towards the end of the winter season indicated microbial resilience to short-lived freeze-thaw disturbance under field conditions. Bacteria showed a higher potential for uptake of plant-derived C substrates during this recovery phase. The observed temporary loss in microbial C-mineralisation capacity and the promotion of bacteria over fungi can likely impede winter SOM cycling in mountain grasslands under recurrent winter climate change events, with plausible implications for soil nutrient availability and plant-soil interactions.",
keywords = "Substrate induced respiration, Priming effect, PLFA, Fungal:Bacterial ratio, Microbial C:N, Climate change",
author = "Konstantin Gavazov and Johannes Ingrisch and Roland Hasibeder and Mills, {Robert T.E.} and Alexandre Buttler and Gerd Gleixner and Jukka Pumpanen and Michael Bahn",
year = "2017",
month = jul,
day = "15",
doi = "10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.010",
language = "English",
pages = "316--324",
journal = "Science of the Total Environment",
issn = "0048-9697",
publisher = "Elsevier Science B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Winter ecology of a subalpine grassland

T2 - effects of snow removal on soil respiration, microbial structure and function

AU - Gavazov, Konstantin

AU - Ingrisch, Johannes

AU - Hasibeder, Roland

AU - Mills, Robert T.E.

AU - Buttler, Alexandre

AU - Gleixner, Gerd

AU - Pumpanen, Jukka

AU - Bahn, Michael

PY - 2017/7/15

Y1 - 2017/7/15

N2 - Abstract Seasonal snow cover provides essential insulation for mountain ecosystems, but expected changes in precipitation patterns and snow cover duration due to global warming can influence the activity of soil microbial communities. In turn, these changes have the potential to create new dynamics of soil organic matter cycling. To assess the effects of experimental snow removal and advanced spring conditions on soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics, and on the biomass and structure of soil microbial communities, we performed an in situ study in a subalpine grassland in the Austrian Alps, in conjunction with soil incubations under controlled conditions. We found substantial winter C-mineralisation and high accumulation of inorganic and organic N in the topsoil, peaking at snowmelt. Soil microbial biomass doubled under the snow, paralleled by a fivefold increase in its C:N ratio, but no apparent change in its bacteria-dominated community structure. Snow removal led to a series of mild freeze-thaw cycles, which had minor effects on in situ soil CO2 production and N mineralisation. Incubated soil under advanced spring conditions, however, revealed an impaired microbial metabolism shortly after snow removal, characterised by a limited capacity for C-mineralisation of both fresh plant-derived substrates and existing soil organic matter (SOM), leading to reduced priming effects. This effect was transient and the observed recovery in microbial respiration and SOM priming towards the end of the winter season indicated microbial resilience to short-lived freeze-thaw disturbance under field conditions. Bacteria showed a higher potential for uptake of plant-derived C substrates during this recovery phase. The observed temporary loss in microbial C-mineralisation capacity and the promotion of bacteria over fungi can likely impede winter SOM cycling in mountain grasslands under recurrent winter climate change events, with plausible implications for soil nutrient availability and plant-soil interactions.

AB - Abstract Seasonal snow cover provides essential insulation for mountain ecosystems, but expected changes in precipitation patterns and snow cover duration due to global warming can influence the activity of soil microbial communities. In turn, these changes have the potential to create new dynamics of soil organic matter cycling. To assess the effects of experimental snow removal and advanced spring conditions on soil carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics, and on the biomass and structure of soil microbial communities, we performed an in situ study in a subalpine grassland in the Austrian Alps, in conjunction with soil incubations under controlled conditions. We found substantial winter C-mineralisation and high accumulation of inorganic and organic N in the topsoil, peaking at snowmelt. Soil microbial biomass doubled under the snow, paralleled by a fivefold increase in its C:N ratio, but no apparent change in its bacteria-dominated community structure. Snow removal led to a series of mild freeze-thaw cycles, which had minor effects on in situ soil CO2 production and N mineralisation. Incubated soil under advanced spring conditions, however, revealed an impaired microbial metabolism shortly after snow removal, characterised by a limited capacity for C-mineralisation of both fresh plant-derived substrates and existing soil organic matter (SOM), leading to reduced priming effects. This effect was transient and the observed recovery in microbial respiration and SOM priming towards the end of the winter season indicated microbial resilience to short-lived freeze-thaw disturbance under field conditions. Bacteria showed a higher potential for uptake of plant-derived C substrates during this recovery phase. The observed temporary loss in microbial C-mineralisation capacity and the promotion of bacteria over fungi can likely impede winter SOM cycling in mountain grasslands under recurrent winter climate change events, with plausible implications for soil nutrient availability and plant-soil interactions.

KW - Substrate induced respiration

KW - Priming effect

KW - PLFA

KW - Fungal:Bacterial ratio

KW - Microbial C:N

KW - Climate change

U2 - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.010

DO - 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.03.010

M3 - Journal article

SP - 316

EP - 324

JO - Science of the Total Environment

JF - Science of the Total Environment

SN - 0048-9697

ER -