Soil geochemistry confines microbial abundances across an arctic landscape; implications for net carbon exchange with the atmosphere

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Abstract

A large portion of the World's terrestrial organic carbon is stored in Arctic permafrost soils. However, due to permafrost warming and increased in situ microbial mineralisation of released carbon, greenhouse gas releases from Arctic soils are increasing, including methane (CH4(g)). To identify environmental controls on such releases, we characterised soil geochemistry and microbial community conditions in 13 near-surface Arctic soils collected across Kongsfjorden, Svalbard. Statistically significant correlations were found between proxies for carbonate mineral content (i.e. Ca and Mg) and soil pH (Spearman rho = 0.87, p < 0.001). In turn, pH significantly inversely correlated with bacterial and Type I methanotroph gene abundances across the soils (r = -0.71, p = 0.01 and r = -0.74, p = 0.006, respectively), which also co-varied with soil phosphorous (P) level (r = 0.79, p = 0.01 and r = 0.63, p = 0.02, respectively). These results suggest that soil P supply, which is controlled by pH and other factors, significantly influences in situ microbial abundances in these Arctic soils. Overall, we conclude microbial responses to increasing 'old carbon' releases in this Arctic region are constrained by nutrient-deficiency in surface soils, with consequential impacts on the flux and composition of carbon gasses released to the atmosphere. © 2014 The Author(s).

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Gray, N. D., McCann, C. M., Christgen, B., Ahammad, S. Z., Roberts, J. A., & Graham, D. W. (2014). Soil geochemistry confines microbial abundances across an arctic landscape; implications for net carbon exchange with the atmosphere. Biogeochemistry, 120(1–3), 307–317. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10533-014-9997-7

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