Response of soil C-, N-, and P- acquisition enzymes to moisture pulses in desert grassland to shrubland state transition

Sci Total Environ. 2023 Feb 25:861:160569. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.160569. Epub 2022 Nov 29.

Abstract

Grassland-shrubland state transition causes profound effects on soil nutrients and microorganisms, yet little is known about how these soil characteristics are influenced by rainfall and litter changes during transition. Here, we examined water (high or low moisture pulse) and litter (grass or shrub) effects on these soil characteristics in grassland-shrubland mosaics consisting of desert grassland (DG), grassland edge (GE), shrubland edge (SE), and shrubland (SL) sites. The results showed that the transition of DG-GE-SE-SL significantly reduced soil moisture, total carbon (C), total nitrogen (N), total phosphorus (P), microbial biomass carbon, and microbial biomass nitrogen, revealing evident soil degradation during this transition. After applying water and litter, soil microbial respiration (SMR) and the activities of all enzymes were promoted to varying degrees among the sites. Specifically, SMR was promoted under a low moisture pulse but suppressed under a high moisture pulse along the transition from DG to SL. Two C-acquisition enzymes, cellobiohydrolase and β-1,4-glucosidase, became increasingly active from DG to SL. Another C-acquisition enzyme of β-1,4-xylosidase and an N-acquisition enzyme of leucine aminopeptidase showed the strongest preferences for low moisture pulses in SL. These results indicated that shrub encroachment retained certain microbes with an advanced ability to acquire to C and N from dry and infertile soil in SL. Although a P-acquisition enzyme of alkaline phosphatase showed a decreasing trend along the transition from DG to SL, similar like those C- and N- acquisition enzymes, it was not sensitive to varying moisture levels, suggesting that alkaline phosphatase was affected by other soil physicochemical properties rather than soil moisture. The joint analysis of soil extracellular enzymes and nutrients indicated that microbial biomass carbon played a more important role than other soil characteristics in determining soil extracellular enzyme activities along the transition from DG to SL. Future research on dissecting soil microbial communities is warranted to better understand the microbiological mechanisms behind these phenomena in the shrub encroachment process.

Keywords: Anthropogenic shrub encroachment; Soil extracellular enzyme activity; Soil microbial respiration; Temperate desert steppe.

MeSH terms

  • Alkaline Phosphatase
  • Carbon / metabolism
  • Grassland*
  • Nitrogen / metabolism
  • Soil Microbiology
  • Soil* / chemistry

Substances

  • Soil
  • Alkaline Phosphatase
  • Carbon
  • Nitrogen