Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress

Many ecosystems are experiencing an increase in drought conditions as a consequence of climate warming and changing precipitation patterns. The stress imposed by these environmental changes can affect ecosystem processes such as the extracellular enzymatic degradation of carbon-containing leaf litte...

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Main Authors: Devan M. Nisson, Steven D. Allison
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BioOne 2020-08-01
Series:Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.elementascience.org/articles/442
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spelling doaj-25ef8c7bde404fff99ae49956cd8b7e42020-11-25T03:00:26ZengBioOneElementa: Science of the Anthropocene2325-10262020-08-018110.1525/elementa.442415Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stressDevan M. Nisson0Steven D. Allison1Department of Geosciences, Princeton University, Princeton, New JerseyDepartments of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Earth System Science, University of CaliforniaMany ecosystems are experiencing an increase in drought conditions as a consequence of climate warming and changing precipitation patterns. The stress imposed by these environmental changes can affect ecosystem processes such as the extracellular enzymatic degradation of carbon-containing leaf litter by soil microbial communities. However, the magnitude of these impacts may depend on the composition and metabolism of the microbial community. Based on the hypothesis of local adaptation, microbial communities native to warm-dry ecosystems should display a greater capacity to degrade leaf litter polymers with extracellular enzymes following exposure to warm-dry conditions. To test this hypothesis, we performed a microcosm study in which we monitored extracellular enzyme activity and respiration of microbial communities from five ecosystems along a southern California climate gradient, ranging from warmer, drier desert to wetter, cooler subalpine forest. To simulate drought and rewetting, we subjected microcosms to periods of high temperature and low moisture followed by a water pulse. We found that enzyme activity of wet-cool communities generally exceeded that of warm-dry communities across enzyme types for the five sites we considered. Additionally, we observed a significant decrease in respiration for all communities after longer durations of drought exposure. Although these findings did not align with our expectations of local adaptation, they suggest litter-inhabiting microbial communities are able to retain metabolic functioning in environmental conditions different from those of their native ecosystems. These results may imply that factors such as litter chemistry impose greater constraints than climate on community metabolic function. Overall, despite differences in local climates, microbial communities from semiarid regions may be metabolically adapted to maintain functioning in the face of drought.https://www.elementascience.org/articles/442microbial communityrespirationextracellular enzymedrought stressclimate changelocal adaptation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Devan M. Nisson
Steven D. Allison
spellingShingle Devan M. Nisson
Steven D. Allison
Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
microbial community
respiration
extracellular enzyme
drought stress
climate change
local adaptation
author_facet Devan M. Nisson
Steven D. Allison
author_sort Devan M. Nisson
title Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
title_short Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
title_full Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
title_fullStr Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
title_full_unstemmed Litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
title_sort litter microbial respiration and enzymatic resistance to drought stress
publisher BioOne
series Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene
issn 2325-1026
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Many ecosystems are experiencing an increase in drought conditions as a consequence of climate warming and changing precipitation patterns. The stress imposed by these environmental changes can affect ecosystem processes such as the extracellular enzymatic degradation of carbon-containing leaf litter by soil microbial communities. However, the magnitude of these impacts may depend on the composition and metabolism of the microbial community. Based on the hypothesis of local adaptation, microbial communities native to warm-dry ecosystems should display a greater capacity to degrade leaf litter polymers with extracellular enzymes following exposure to warm-dry conditions. To test this hypothesis, we performed a microcosm study in which we monitored extracellular enzyme activity and respiration of microbial communities from five ecosystems along a southern California climate gradient, ranging from warmer, drier desert to wetter, cooler subalpine forest. To simulate drought and rewetting, we subjected microcosms to periods of high temperature and low moisture followed by a water pulse. We found that enzyme activity of wet-cool communities generally exceeded that of warm-dry communities across enzyme types for the five sites we considered. Additionally, we observed a significant decrease in respiration for all communities after longer durations of drought exposure. Although these findings did not align with our expectations of local adaptation, they suggest litter-inhabiting microbial communities are able to retain metabolic functioning in environmental conditions different from those of their native ecosystems. These results may imply that factors such as litter chemistry impose greater constraints than climate on community metabolic function. Overall, despite differences in local climates, microbial communities from semiarid regions may be metabolically adapted to maintain functioning in the face of drought.
topic microbial community
respiration
extracellular enzyme
drought stress
climate change
local adaptation
url https://www.elementascience.org/articles/442
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AT stevendallison littermicrobialrespirationandenzymaticresistancetodroughtstress
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