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Global ecological predictors of the soil priming effect

Authors :
School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
Bastida, Felipe
Garcia, Carlos
Fierer, Noah
Eldridge, David J.
Bowker, Matthew A.
Abades, Sebastian R.
Alfaro, Fernando D.
Berhe, Asmeret Asefaw
Cutler, Nick A.
Gallardo, Antonio
Garcia-Velazquez, Laura
Hart, Stephen C.
Hayes, Patrick E.
Hernández, Teresa
Hseu, Zeng-Yei
Jehmlich, Nico
Kirchmair, Martin
Lambers, Hans
Neuhauser, Sigrid
Pena-Ramirez, Victor M.
Perez, Cecilia A.
Reed, Sasha C.
Santos, Fernanda
Siebe, Christina
Sullivan, Benjamin W.
Trivedi, Pankaj
Vera, Alfonso
Williams, Mark A.
Moreno, Jose Luis
Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel
School of Plant and Environmental Sciences
Bastida, Felipe
Garcia, Carlos
Fierer, Noah
Eldridge, David J.
Bowker, Matthew A.
Abades, Sebastian R.
Alfaro, Fernando D.
Berhe, Asmeret Asefaw
Cutler, Nick A.
Gallardo, Antonio
Garcia-Velazquez, Laura
Hart, Stephen C.
Hayes, Patrick E.
Hernández, Teresa
Hseu, Zeng-Yei
Jehmlich, Nico
Kirchmair, Martin
Lambers, Hans
Neuhauser, Sigrid
Pena-Ramirez, Victor M.
Perez, Cecilia A.
Reed, Sasha C.
Santos, Fernanda
Siebe, Christina
Sullivan, Benjamin W.
Trivedi, Pankaj
Vera, Alfonso
Williams, Mark A.
Moreno, Jose Luis
Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Identifying the global drivers of soil priming is essential to understanding C cycling in terrestrial ecosystems. We conducted a survey of soils across 86 globally-distributed locations, spanning a wide range of climates, biotic communities, and soil conditions, and evaluated the apparent soil priming effect using C-13-glucose labeling. Here we show that the magnitude of the positive apparent priming effect (increase in CO2 release through accelerated microbial biomass turnover) was negatively associated with SOC content and microbial respiration rates. Our statistical modeling suggests that apparent priming effects tend to be negative in more mesic sites associated with higher SOC contents. In contrast, a single-input of labile C causes positive apparent priming effects in more arid locations with low SOC contents. Our results provide solid evidence that SOC content plays a critical role in regulating apparent priming effects, with important implications for the improvement of C cycling models under global change scenarios.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1357747851
Document Type :
Electronic Resource