Microbial mechanisms of interactive climate-driven changes in soil N2O and CH4 fluxes: A global meta-analysis.

Journal: Journal Of Environmental Management
Published:
Abstract

Soils represent both a source of and sink for greenhouse gases (GHG). Elevated temperature (eT) affects both the physical and biological factors that drive GHG emissions from soil and thus understanding the effects of rising global temperatures on terrestrial GHG emission is needed to predict future GHG emissions, and to identify mitigation strategies. However, uncertainty remains about the interactive effects of multiple climate factors across different ecosystems, complicating our ability to develop robust climate change projections. Therefore, a global meta-analysis of 1337 pairwise observations from 150 peer-reviewed publications (1990-2023) was conducted to assess the individual effect of eT and its combined effects with eCO2 (eT + eCO2), drought (eT + drought) and increased precipitation (eT + ePPT) on soil N2O and CH4 fluxes, microbial functional genes, and soil extracellular enzyme activities across grassland, cropland, and forestland ecosystems. Across the dataset, eT significantly increased N2O emissions (21%) and CH4 uptake (36%). Nitrogen cycling was consistently stimulated by eT, with NO3- and NH4+ and the abundance of amoA-AOB gene increasing by 6%, 10%, and 18%, respectively. Soil water content (SWC) was reduced, whereas increases of 9% in soil organic carbon (SOC), 14% in microbial biomass carbon (MBC), and 10% in total plant biomass were found under eT. The stimulation of soil N2O emissions by eT was maintained for all ecosystems when combined with other global change factors (ie., eT + eCO2, eT + ePPT, and eT + drought). By contrast, effects of eT on CH4 uptake and emissions were more variable when combined with other factors; for instance, eT + eCO2 and eT + ePPT suppressed CH4 uptake in grasslands. This study highlights the urgent need to study the microbial mechanisms responsible for combined global change effects on N2O and especially CH4 fluxes.

Authors
Awais Shakoor, Elise Pendall, Catriona Macdonald