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Fungi and bacteria trade-off mediates drought-induced reduction in wood decomposition

Authors :
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (China)
Peñuelas, Josep [0000-0002-7215-0150]
Zhou, Guiyao [0000-0002-1385-3913]
Zhou, Xuhui [0000-0002-2038-9901]
Jia, Shuxian
Yuan, Tengfeng
Fu, Yuling
Peñuelas, Josep
Zhou, Guiyao
Zhou, Lingyan
Liu, Dingqin
He, Yanghui
Liu, Ruiqiang
Wang, Xinxin
Song, Bingqian
Jiang, Zheng
Zhou, Xuhui
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Natural Science Foundation of Shanghai
Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (China)
Peñuelas, Josep [0000-0002-7215-0150]
Zhou, Guiyao [0000-0002-1385-3913]
Zhou, Xuhui [0000-0002-2038-9901]
Jia, Shuxian
Yuan, Tengfeng
Fu, Yuling
Peñuelas, Josep
Zhou, Guiyao
Zhou, Lingyan
Liu, Dingqin
He, Yanghui
Liu, Ruiqiang
Wang, Xinxin
Song, Bingqian
Jiang, Zheng
Zhou, Xuhui
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Climate change has significantly increased the frequency and intensity of drought events in recent decades, which may affect the decomposition of organic matter such as deadwood. Previous studies have examined the impacts of microclimate and wood traits on deadwood decomposition, but how wood microbes regulate effects of drought intensity on deadwood decomposition remains unclear. In this study, a field drought experiment was conducted with three throughfall exclusion levels (i.e., control, −35% and −70% rainfall treatments) in a subtropical forest to probe relative importance of microclimate, wood traits, and microbial biomass on wood decomposition. Our results showed that the −35% and −70% rainfall treatments significantly decreased wood CO2 efflux by 28.27% and 47.49%, respectively. Drought-induced decreases in wood CO2 efflux were mainly mediated by wood microbial biomass, particularly wood fungi biomass. The structural equation modelling indicated a shift in the dominant wood microbial communities in regulating wood CO2 efflux from bacteria to fungi as drought intensities increased. Our findings highlight the crucial role of wood microbial community with the trade-off between fungi and bacteria on deadwood decomposition under drought, which should be taken into account to decode forest carbon cycle − climate feedback in the future research.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1442728644
Document Type :
Electronic Resource