Carbon stored in world's soils more vulnerable to climate change

The response of soil microbial communities to changes in temperature increases the potential for more carbon dioxide to be released from the world's soils as global temperatures rise, scientists have revealed.

The potential for global warming to stimulate decomposition rates in soils, and thus release large quantities of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere, has long been considered to be one of the potentially most important positive feedbacks to climate change. However, results from some more recent studies have suggested that responses within microbial communities could actually reduce, or even eliminate, the potential for soil carbon losses under global warming.

To clarify these conflicting scenarios, researchers carried out studies using soils collected from a thermal gradient from the Arctic to the Amazon rainforest. The results, published in Nature today, show that microbial community responses resulted in an overall increase, rather than a decrease, in the effects of temperature on rates of carbon dioxide release from soils.

Dr Kristiina Karhu of the University of Helsinki, the lead author of the paper, said: “Because soils store more than twice as much carbon than the atmosphere, changes in rates of decomposition and carbon dioxide release from soil could be very important. Our findings suggest that warming will increase the activity of soil microbes to a greater extent than was previously expected, which could have implications for future rates of climate change.”

Responses were not found to be equal in all soils and differed between geographical regions and ecosystem types. Managed agricultural soils stood out, being the only soils in which microbial community responses reduced the effects of a temperature change on rates of carbon dioxide release. On the other hand, the greatest stimulation was observed in the soils with the greatest carbon content and from boreal and arctic ecosystems, which are warming most rapidly. This indicates that the observed responses could increase the vulnerability of some of the world's most important soil carbon stocks to climate change.


Dr Iain Hartley, of the University of Exeter’s College of Life and Environmental Sciences, added: “It is only relatively recently that we have recognised how important it is to understand soil microbial community responses to changes in temperature. Big advances have been made in recent years, and there are now models that simulate key microbial processes. We have a great opportunity to really advance this subject, and improve predictions of rates of carbon dioxide release from soils under global warming, but there is still a huge amount that we need to understand better."

Dr Jennifer Dungait, of the Sustainable Soils and Grassland Systems Department at Rothamsted Research, a co-author on the paper, said: ‘‘Reducing the carbon footprint of agricultural production is a strategic research priority at Rothamsted Research. The observation that the losses of CO2 from managed soils are less likely to increase in response to changes in temperature could have important implications for the development of methods to improve soil quality and mitigate climate change by increasing soil organic carbon’’.

"This study shows how incredibly complex the world's managed and natural ecosystems are, particularly also with regard to their response to a changing environment. It illustrates the need for a global approach to managing critical natural resources, but one that provides locally tailored solutions. A new era of soil biology research should help us understand and manage critical functions of carbon and nutrient cycles", added Prof Achim Doberman, Director of Rothamsted Research.

The research took place within a Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)-funded project, led by the University of Exeter. The study also involved teams from the University of Aberdeen, Heriot-Watt University, University of Edinburgh, University of Stirling, and Rothamsted Research, with key collaborators in continental Europe, Australia and South America.