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Enhanced summer warming reduces fungal decomposer diversity and litter mass loss more strongly in dry than in wet tundra

Christiansen, Casper T. ; Haugwitz, Merian S. ; Priemé, Anders ; Nielsen, Cecilie S. ; Elberling, Bo ; Michelsen, Anders ; Grogan, Paul and Blok, Daan LU (2017) In Global Change Biology 23(1). p.406-420
Abstract
Many Arctic regions are currently experiencing substantial summer and winter climate changes. Litter decomposition is a fundamental component of ecosystem carbon and nutrient cycles, with fungi being among the primary decomposers. To assess the impacts of seasonal climatic changes on litter fungal communities and their functioning, Betula glandulosa leaf litter was surface-incubated in two adjacent low Arctic sites with contrasting soil moisture regimes: dry shrub heath and wet sedge tundra at Disko Island, Greenland. At both sites, we investigated the impacts of factorial combinations of enhanced summer warming (using open-top chambers; OTCs) and deepened snow (using snow fences) on surface litter mass loss, chemistry and fungal... (More)
Many Arctic regions are currently experiencing substantial summer and winter climate changes. Litter decomposition is a fundamental component of ecosystem carbon and nutrient cycles, with fungi being among the primary decomposers. To assess the impacts of seasonal climatic changes on litter fungal communities and their functioning, Betula glandulosa leaf litter was surface-incubated in two adjacent low Arctic sites with contrasting soil moisture regimes: dry shrub heath and wet sedge tundra at Disko Island, Greenland. At both sites, we investigated the impacts of factorial combinations of enhanced summer warming (using open-top chambers; OTCs) and deepened snow (using snow fences) on surface litter mass loss, chemistry and fungal decomposer communities after approximately 1 year. Enhanced summer warming significantly restricted litter mass loss by 32% in the dry and 17% in the wet site. Litter moisture content was significantly reduced by summer warming in the dry, but not in the wet site. Likewise, fungal total abundance and diversity were reduced by OTC warming at the dry site, while comparatively modest warming effects were observed in the wet site. These results suggest that increased evapotranspiration in the OTC plots lowered litter moisture content to the point where fungal decomposition activities became inhibited. In contrast, snow addition enhanced fungal abundance in both sites but did not significantly affect litter mass loss rates. Across sites, control plots only shared 15% of their fungal phylotypes, suggesting strong local controls on fungal decomposer community composition. Nevertheless, fungal community functioning (litter decomposition) was negatively affected by warming in both sites. We conclude that although buried soil organic matter decomposition is widely expected to increase with future summer warming, surface litter decay and nutrient turnover rates in both xeric and relatively moist tundra are likely to be significantly restricted by the evaporative drying associated with warmer air temperatures. (Less)
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author
; ; ; ; ; ; and
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Arctic, Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Betula glandulosa, climate warming, deepened snow, fungi, litter decomposition, litter moisture
in
Global Change Biology
volume
23
issue
1
pages
406 - 420
publisher
Wiley-Blackwell
external identifiers
  • scopus:84977562374
  • pmid:27197084
ISSN
1365-2486
DOI
10.1111/gcb.13362
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
e8eea27c-bd6d-4ad1-a0b0-261425a1c584
date added to LUP
2016-08-25 22:41:31
date last changed
2022-06-26 17:47:09
@article{e8eea27c-bd6d-4ad1-a0b0-261425a1c584,
  abstract     = {{Many Arctic regions are currently experiencing substantial summer and winter climate changes. Litter decomposition is a fundamental component of ecosystem carbon and nutrient cycles, with fungi being among the primary decomposers. To assess the impacts of seasonal climatic changes on litter fungal communities and their functioning, Betula glandulosa leaf litter was surface-incubated in two adjacent low Arctic sites with contrasting soil moisture regimes: dry shrub heath and wet sedge tundra at Disko Island, Greenland. At both sites, we investigated the impacts of factorial combinations of enhanced summer warming (using open-top chambers; OTCs) and deepened snow (using snow fences) on surface litter mass loss, chemistry and fungal decomposer communities after approximately 1 year. Enhanced summer warming significantly restricted litter mass loss by 32% in the dry and 17% in the wet site. Litter moisture content was significantly reduced by summer warming in the dry, but not in the wet site. Likewise, fungal total abundance and diversity were reduced by OTC warming at the dry site, while comparatively modest warming effects were observed in the wet site. These results suggest that increased evapotranspiration in the OTC plots lowered litter moisture content to the point where fungal decomposition activities became inhibited. In contrast, snow addition enhanced fungal abundance in both sites but did not significantly affect litter mass loss rates. Across sites, control plots only shared 15% of their fungal phylotypes, suggesting strong local controls on fungal decomposer community composition. Nevertheless, fungal community functioning (litter decomposition) was negatively affected by warming in both sites. We conclude that although buried soil organic matter decomposition is widely expected to increase with future summer warming, surface litter decay and nutrient turnover rates in both xeric and relatively moist tundra are likely to be significantly restricted by the evaporative drying associated with warmer air temperatures.}},
  author       = {{Christiansen, Casper T. and Haugwitz, Merian S. and Priemé, Anders and Nielsen, Cecilie S. and Elberling, Bo and Michelsen, Anders and Grogan, Paul and Blok, Daan}},
  issn         = {{1365-2486}},
  keywords     = {{Arctic, Ascomycota, Basidiomycota, Betula glandulosa, climate warming, deepened snow, fungi, litter decomposition, litter moisture}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{406--420}},
  publisher    = {{Wiley-Blackwell}},
  series       = {{Global Change Biology}},
  title        = {{Enhanced summer warming reduces fungal decomposer diversity and litter mass loss more strongly in dry than in wet tundra}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/gcb.13362}},
  doi          = {{10.1111/gcb.13362}},
  volume       = {{23}},
  year         = {{2017}},
}