Stimulation of soil respiration by elevated CO2 is enhanced under nitrogen limitation in a decade-long grassland study

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2020 Dec 29;117(52):33317-33324. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2002780117. Epub 2020 Dec 14.

Abstract

Whether and how CO2 and nitrogen (N) availability interact to influence carbon (C) cycling processes such as soil respiration remains a question of considerable uncertainty in projecting future C-climate feedbacks, which are strongly influenced by multiple global change drivers, including elevated atmospheric CO2 concentrations (eCO2) and increased N deposition. However, because decades of research on the responses of ecosystems to eCO2 and N enrichment have been done largely independently, their interactive effects on soil respiratory CO2 efflux remain unresolved. Here, we show that in a multifactor free-air CO2 enrichment experiment, BioCON (Biodiversity, CO2, and N deposition) in Minnesota, the positive response of soil respiration to eCO2 gradually strengthened at ambient (low) N supply but not enriched (high) N supply for the 12-y experimental period from 1998 to 2009. In contrast to earlier years, eCO2 stimulated soil respiration twice as much at low than at high N supply from 2006 to 2009. In parallel, microbial C degradation genes were significantly boosted by eCO2 at low but not high N supply. Incorporating those functional genes into a coupled C-N ecosystem model reduced model parameter uncertainty and improved the projections of the effects of different CO2 and N levels on soil respiration. If our observed results generalize to other ecosystems, they imply widely positive effects of eCO2 on soil respiration even in infertile systems.

Keywords: Earth ecosystem model; elevated CO2; metagenomics; nitrogen deposition; soil respiration.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Aerobiosis
  • Carbon Dioxide / pharmacology*
  • Computer Simulation
  • Grassland*
  • Nitrogen / pharmacology*
  • Soil / chemistry*
  • Soil Microbiology

Substances

  • Soil
  • Carbon Dioxide
  • Nitrogen