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Interactive effects of global change on soil microbial community composition and function

Posted on:2006-06-19Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of MichiganCandidate:Chung, HaegeunFull Text:PDF
GTID:1453390008455483Subject:Agriculture
Abstract/Summary:PDF Full Text Request
Anthropogenic activity has altered biogeochemical cycles and reduced plant species richness on a global basis. Atmospheric CO2 and O 3 enrichment, atmospheric N deposition, and plant species loss alter plant production and litter biochemistry, which could modify heterotrophic soil microbial activity. The objective of my dissertation research was to determine the interactive effects of these global change components on microbial community composition and metabolism. To achieve this goal, I studied changes in composition and function of soil microbial communities in two distinct experiments in which levels of atmospheric CO2, O3, N deposition, and plant species richness were manipulated to simulate aforementioned global change.; I analyzed the combined impacts of CO2 and O3 enrichment on fungal community composition and function in an experiment in which northern hardwood trees were grown under elevated levels of CO2 and O 3. Elevated CO2 enhanced fungal metabolism through greater plant litter input as evidenced by higher cellulolytic and chitinolytic activity, and elevated O3 dampened this effect via reduced substrate input; however, the interactive effects of CO2 and O3 were not statistically significant. Repressed fungal metabolism under elevated O3 was accompanied by a change in fungal community composition. My results suggest that elevated CO2 will stimulate fungal metabolism and hasten belowground C cycling, and that repressed fungal activity and changes in fungal community composition under elevated O3 will lead to slower soil C cycling.; In a different experiment in which grassland plant communities of increasing species richness (1, 4, 9, and 16 species) were subjected to factorial CO 2 and N deposition treatments, interactions among declining plant species richness, elevated CO2, and N deposition on soil microbial communities were examined. Interactive effects of plant species richness, elevated CO 2, and N deposition significantly altered microbial community composition, but microbial degradative potential was affected little by the interactions. Plant species richness increased microbial biomass, fungal abundance, cellulolytic potential, and microbial incorporation of new photosynthate, which suggest that greater plant species richness promotes faster rates of microbial metabolism, and that microbial activity may decrease with plant species loss. Nitrogen amendment lowered total microbial biomass, which could be due to the inhibitory effect of N addition on lignin degradation by white-rot basidiomycetes or mycorrhizal infection. Altogether, my results demonstrate that individual effects of global change components more strongly influence microbial community composition and function than their interactive effects.
Keywords/Search Tags:Community composition, Interactive effects, Global, Plant species richness, CO2, Elevated O3, Activity
PDF Full Text Request
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