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      Reduced feeding activity of soil detritivores under warmer and drier conditions

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          Abstract

          Anthropogenic warming is projected to trigger positive feedbacks to climate by enhancing carbon losses from the soil 1. While such losses are, in part, owing to increased decomposition of organic matter by invertebrate detritivores, it is unknown how detritivore feeding activity will change with warming 2, especially under drought conditions. Here, using four year manipulation experiments in two North American boreal forests, we investigate how temperature (ambient, +1.7 °C, +3.4 °C) and rainfall (ambient, -40% summer precipitation) perturbations influence detritivore feeding activity. In contrast to general expectations 1, 3, warming had negligible net effects on detritivore feeding activity at ambient precipitation. However, when combined with precipitation reductions, warming decreased feeding activity by ~14%. As across all plots and dates, detritivore feeding activity was positively associated to bulk soil microbial respiration, our results suggest slower rates of decomposition of soil organic matter, and thus reduced positive feedbacks to climate under anthropogenic climate change.

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          Soil-carbon response to warming dependent on microbial physiology

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            Soil warming and carbon-cycle feedbacks to the climate system.

            In a decade-long soil warming experiment in a mid-latitude hardwood forest, we documented changes in soil carbon and nitrogen cycling in order to investigate the consequences of these changes for the climate system. Here we show that whereas soil warming accelerates soil organic matter decay and carbon dioxide fluxes to the atmosphere, this response is small and short-lived for a mid-latitude forest, because of the limited size of the labile soil carbon pool. We also show that warming increases the availability of mineral nitrogen to plants. Because plant growth in many mid-latitude forests is nitrogen-limited, warming has the potential to indirectly stimulate enough carbon storage in plants to at least compensate for the carbon losses from soils. Our results challenge assumptions made in some climate models that lead to projections of large long-term releases of soil carbon in response to warming of forest ecosystems.
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              Temperature-associated increases in the global soil respiration record.

              Soil respiration, R(S), the flux of microbially and plant-respired carbon dioxide (CO(2)) from the soil surface to the atmosphere, is the second-largest terrestrial carbon flux. However, the dynamics of R(S) are not well understood and the global flux remains poorly constrained. Ecosystem warming experiments, modelling analyses and fundamental biokinetics all suggest that R(S) should change with climate. This has been difficult to confirm observationally because of the high spatial variability of R(S), inaccessibility of the soil medium and the inability of remote-sensing instruments to measure R(S) on large scales. Despite these constraints, it may be possible to discern climate-driven changes in regional or global R(S) values in the extant four-decade record of R(S) chamber measurements. Here we construct a database of worldwide R(S) observations matched with high-resolution historical climate data and find a previously unknown temporal trend in the R(S) record after accounting for mean annual climate, leaf area, nitrogen deposition and changes in CO(2) measurement technique. We find that the air temperature anomaly (the deviation from the 1961-1990 mean) is significantly and positively correlated with changes in R(S). We estimate that the global R(S) in 2008 (that is, the flux integrated over the Earth's land surface over 2008) was 98 +/- 12 Pg C and that it increased by 0.1 Pg C yr(-1) between 1989 and 2008, implying a global R(S) response to air temperature (Q(10)) of 1.5. An increasing global R(S) value does not necessarily constitute a positive feedback to the atmosphere, as it could be driven by higher carbon inputs to soil rather than by mobilization of stored older carbon. The available data are, however, consistent with an acceleration of the terrestrial carbon cycle in response to global climate change.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                101557419
                39051
                Nat Clim Chang
                Nat Clim Chang
                Nature climate change
                1758-678X
                1758-6798
                23 November 2017
                18 December 2017
                January 2018
                18 June 2018
                : 8
                : 1
                : 75-78
                Affiliations
                [1 ]German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (iDiv) Halle-Jena-Leipzig, Deutscher Platz 5e, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
                [2 ]Institute of Biology, Leipzig University, Deutscher Platz 5e, 04103 Leipzig, Germany
                [3 ]Department of Forest Resources, University of Minnesota, 1530 North Cleveland Avenue, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA
                [4 ]Hawkesbury Institute for the Environment, University of Western Sydney, Penrith, NSW, 2751, Australia
                [5 ]Department of Ecology, Evolution, and Behavior, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108, USA
                [6 ]Department of Plant Biology, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 61801, USA
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author ( madhav.prakash.thakur@ 123456gmail.com )
                Article
                EMS75016
                10.1038/s41558-017-0032-6
                5777625
                29375673
                e7cf3853-952d-4cd5-beaa-080018d4a54c

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