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Article

Drivers of the microbial metabolic quotient across global grasslands

Details

Citation

Risch AC, Zimmermann S, Schütz M, Borer ET, Broadbent AAD, Caldeira MC, Davies KF, Eisenhauer N, Eskelinen A, Fay PA, Hagedorn F, Knops JMH, Lembrechts JJ, MacDougall AS & McCulley RL (2023) Drivers of the microbial metabolic quotient across global grasslands. Global Ecology and Biogeography, 32 (6), pp. 904-918. https://doi.org/10.1111/geb.13664

Abstract
Aim The microbial metabolic quotient (MMQ; mg CO2-C/mg MBC/h), defined as the amount of microbial CO2 respired (MR; mg CO2-C/kg soil/h) per unit of microbial biomass C (MBC; mg C/kg soil), is a key parameter for understanding the microbial regulation of the carbon (C) cycle, including soil C sequestration. Here, we experimentally tested hypotheses about the individual and interactive effects of multiple nutrient addition (nitrogen + phosphorus + potassium?+?micronutrients) and herbivore exclusion on MR, MBC and MMQ across 23 sites (five continents). Our sites encompassed a wide range of edaphoclimatic conditions; thus, we assessed which edaphoclimatic variables affected MMQ the most and how they interacted with our treatments. Location Australia, Asia, Europe, North/South America. Time period 2015–2016. Major taxa Soil microbes. Methods Soils were collected from plots with established experimental treatments. MR was assessed in a 5-week laboratory incubation without glucose addition, MBC via substrate-induced respiration. MMQ was calculated as MR/MBC and corrected for soil temperatures (MMQsoil). Using linear mixed effects models (LMMs) and structural equation models (SEMs), we analysed how edaphoclimatic characteristics and treatments interactively affected MMQsoil. Results MMQsoil was higher in locations with higher mean annual temperature, lower water holding capacity and lower soil organic C concentration, but did not respond to our treatments across sites as neither MR nor MBC changed. We attributed this relative homeostasis to our treatments to the modulating influence of edaphoclimatic variables. For example, herbivore exclusion, regardless of fertilization, led to greater MMQsoil only at sites with lower soil organic C (

Keywords
anthropogenic management; climate; herbivore exclusion; microbial biomass carbon; microbial respiration; nutrient addition; Nutrient Network: A Global Research Cooperative (NutNet); soil properties

Notes
Additional authors: B. A. Melbourne, J. L. Moore, S. A. Power, E. W. Seabloom, M. L. Silviera, R. Virtanen, L. Yahdjian, R. Ochoa-Hueso

Journal
Global Ecology and Biogeography: Volume 32, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Funders and
Publication date30/06/2023
Publication date online04/04/2023
Date accepted by journal24/02/2024
URL
PublisherWiley
ISSN1466-822X
eISSN1466-8238

People (1)

Dr Arthur Broadbent

Dr Arthur Broadbent

Research Fellow (NERC), Biological and Environmental Sciences

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