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Contrasting plant–soil–microbial feedbacks stabilize vegetation types and uncouple topsoil C and N stocks across a subarctic–alpine landscape
Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Forest Mycology and Plant Pathology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
Department of Biological Sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway.
Department of Soil and Environment, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden.
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2023 (English)In: New Phytologist, ISSN 0028-646X, E-ISSN 1469-8137, Vol. 238, no 6, p. 2621-2633Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]

Global vegetation regimes vary in belowground carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) dynamics. However, disentangling large-scale climatic controls from the effects of intrinsic plant–soil–microbial feedbacks on belowground processes is challenging. In local gradients with similar pedo-climatic conditions, effects of plant–microbial feedbacks may be isolated from large-scale drivers. Across a subarctic–alpine mosaic of historic grazing fields and surrounding heath and birch forest, we evaluated whether vegetation-specific plant–microbial feedbacks involved contrasting N cycling characteristics and C and N stocks in the organic topsoil. We sequenced soil fungi, quantified functional genes within the inorganic N cycle, and measured 15N natural abundance. In grassland soils, large N stocks and low C : N ratios associated with fungal saprotrophs, archaeal ammonia oxidizers, and bacteria capable of respiratory ammonification, indicating maintained inorganic N cycling a century after abandoned reindeer grazing. Toward forest and heath, increasing abundance of mycorrhizal fungi co-occurred with transition to organic N cycling. However, ectomycorrhizal fungal decomposers correlated with small soil N and C stocks in forest, while root-associated ascomycetes associated with small N but large C stocks in heath, uncoupling C and N storage across vegetation types. We propose that contrasting, positive plant–microbial feedbacks stabilize vegetation trajectories, resulting in diverging soil C : N ratios at the landscape scale.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
John Wiley & Sons, 2023. Vol. 238, no 6, p. 2621-2633
Keywords [en]
forest, fungal saprotrophs, grassland, heathland, mycorrhiza, N cycling, vegetation gradients
National Category
Soil Science Ecology
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-202346DOI: 10.1111/nph.18679ISI: 000905506600001PubMedID: 36519258Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85145330859OAI: oai:DiVA.org:umu-202346DiVA, id: diva2:1725878
Funder
Swedish University of Agricultural SciencesSwedish Research CouncilScience for Life Laboratory, SciLifeLabAvailable from: 2023-01-12 Created: 2023-01-12 Last updated: 2023-06-20Bibliographically approved

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Olofsson, Johan

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