Anoxic conditions drive phosphorus limitation in humid tropical forest soil microorganisms

A. Gross, J. Pett-Ridge, P. K. Weber, S. Blazewicz, W. L. Silver

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contribution

Abstract

The elemental stoichiometry of carbon (C), nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) of soil microorganisms (C:N:P ratios) regulates transfers of energy and nutrients to higher trophic levels. In humid tropical forests that grow on P-depleted soils, the ability of microbes to concentrate P from their surroundings likely plays a critical role in P-retention and ultimately in forest productivity. Models predict that climate change will cause dramatic changes in rainfall patterns in the humid tropics and field studies have shown these changes can affect the redox state of tropical forest soils, influencing soil respiration and biogeochemical cycling. However, the responses of soil microorganisms to changing environmental conditions are not well known. Here, we incubated humid tropical soils under oxic or anoxic conditions with substrates differing in both C:P stoichiometry and lability, to assess how soil microorganisms respond to different redox regimes. We found that under oxic conditions, microbial C:P ratios were similar to the global optimal ratio (55:1), indicating most microbial cells can adapt to persistent aerated conditions in these soils. However, under anoxic conditions, the ability of soil microbes to acquire soil P declined and their C:P ratios shifted away from the optimal ratio. NanoSIMS elemental imaging of single cells extracted from soil revealed that under anoxic conditions, C:P ratios were above the microbial optimal value in 83% of the cells, in comparison to 41% under oxic conditions. These data suggest microbial growth efficiency switched from being energy limited under oxic conditions to P-limited under anoxic conditions, indicating that, microbial growth in low P humid tropical forests soils may be most constrained by P-limitation when conditions are oxygen-limited. We suggest that differential microbial responses to soil redox states could have important implications for productivity of humid tropical forests under future climate scenarios.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAmerican Geophysical Union, Fall Meeting 2017
Volume23
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2017
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • 0409 Bioavailability: chemical speciation and complexation
  • 0414 Biogeochemical cycles
  • 0465 Microbiology: ecology
  • 0470 Nutrients and nutrient cycling
  • BIOGEOSCIENCES
  • and modeling
  • physiology and genomics
  • processes

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