Soil carbonyl sulfide exchange in relation to microbial community composition: Insights from a managed grassland soil amendment experiment

The viability of carbonyl sulfide (COS) measurements for partitioning ecosystem-scale net carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes into photosynthesis and respiration critically depends on our knowledge of non-leaf sinks and sources of COS in ecosystems. We combined soil gas exchange measurements of COS and CO2...

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Veröffentlicht in:Soil biology & biochemistry 2019-08, Vol.135, p.28-37
Hauptverfasser: Kitz, Florian, Gómez-Brandón, María, Eder, Bernhard, Etemadi, Mohammad, Spielmann, Felix M., Hammerle, Albin, Insam, Heribert, Wohlfahrt, Georg
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The viability of carbonyl sulfide (COS) measurements for partitioning ecosystem-scale net carbon dioxide (CO2) fluxes into photosynthesis and respiration critically depends on our knowledge of non-leaf sinks and sources of COS in ecosystems. We combined soil gas exchange measurements of COS and CO2 with next-generation sequencing technology (NGS) to investigate the role of soil microbiota for soil COS exchange. We applied different treatments (litter and glucose addition, enzyme inhibition and gamma sterilization) to soil samples from a temperate grassland to manipulate microbial composition and activity. While untreated soil was characterized by consistent COS uptake, other treatments reduced COS uptake and even turned the soil into a net COS source. Removing biotic processes through sterilization led to positive or zero fluxes. We used NGS to link changes in the COS response to alterations in the microbial community composition, with bacterial data having a higher explanatory power for the measured COS fluxes than fungal data. We found that the genera Arthrobacter and Streptomyces were particularly abundant in samples exhibiting high COS emissions. Our results indicate co-occurring abiotic production and biotic consumption of COS in untreated soil, the latter linked to carbonic anhydrase activity, and a strong dependency of the COS flux on the activity, identity, abundance of and substrate available to microorganisms. •After litter and glucose addition soil samples turned from a carbonyl sulfide (COS) sink into a COS source.•No substantial uptake of COS in sterilized soil samples.•Arthrobacter spp. and Streptomyces spp. are more abundant in soil samples exhibiting high COS emissions.
ISSN:0038-0717
1879-3428
DOI:10.1016/j.soilbio.2019.04.005