Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capacity to stabilize carbon (C) and retain nitrogen (N), with critical consequences for the soil C and N storage at high latitude soils. Geothermally active areas in Iceland provided wide, continuous and stable gradients of soil temperatures to test this hypothesis. In order to characterize the stoichiometric demands of microbes from these subarctic soils, we incubated soils from ambient temperatures after the factorial addition of C, N and P substrates separately and in combination. In a second experiment, soils that had been exposed to different in situ warming intensities (+0, +0.5, +1.8, +3.4, +8.7, +15.9 °C above ambient) for seven years wer...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Half the global soil carbon (C) is held in high-latitude systems. Climate change will expose these t...
Current carbon cycle-climate models predict that future soil carbon storage will be determined by th...
Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capac...
Increasing temperatures can accelerate soil organic matter decomposition and release large amounts o...
Arctic soil carbon (C) stocks are threatened by the rapidly advancing global warming. In addition to...
The balance of microbial nitrogen (N) transformation processes in sub-arctic terrestrial ecosystems ...
Increasing global temperatures have been reported to accelerate soil carbon (C) cycling but also to ...
Temperature change is acknowledged to have a significant effect on soil biological processes and the...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Studying biological parameters of northern latitude soils is of importance because of their high cap...
Northern peatlands constitute an important component of the global carbon (C) cycle due to their lon...
Global warming in the Arctic may alter decomposition rates in Arctic soils and therefore nutrient av...
Soils store about four times as much carbon as plant biomass(1), and soil microbial respiration rele...
Northern peatlands constitute an important component of the global carbon (C) cycle due to their lon...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Half the global soil carbon (C) is held in high-latitude systems. Climate change will expose these t...
Current carbon cycle-climate models predict that future soil carbon storage will be determined by th...
Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capac...
Increasing temperatures can accelerate soil organic matter decomposition and release large amounts o...
Arctic soil carbon (C) stocks are threatened by the rapidly advancing global warming. In addition to...
The balance of microbial nitrogen (N) transformation processes in sub-arctic terrestrial ecosystems ...
Increasing global temperatures have been reported to accelerate soil carbon (C) cycling but also to ...
Temperature change is acknowledged to have a significant effect on soil biological processes and the...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Studying biological parameters of northern latitude soils is of importance because of their high cap...
Northern peatlands constitute an important component of the global carbon (C) cycle due to their lon...
Global warming in the Arctic may alter decomposition rates in Arctic soils and therefore nutrient av...
Soils store about four times as much carbon as plant biomass(1), and soil microbial respiration rele...
Northern peatlands constitute an important component of the global carbon (C) cycle due to their lon...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Half the global soil carbon (C) is held in high-latitude systems. Climate change will expose these t...
Current carbon cycle-climate models predict that future soil carbon storage will be determined by th...