Increasing temperatures can accelerate soil organic matter decomposition and release large amounts of CO2 to the atmosphere, potentially inducing positive warming feedbacks. Alterations to the temperature sensitivity and physiological functioning of soil microorganisms may play a key role in these carbon (C) losses. Geothermally active areas in Iceland provide stable and continuous soil temperature gradients to test this hypothesis, encompassing the full range of warming scenarios projected by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change for the northern region. We took soils from these geothermal sites 7 years after the onset of warming and incubated them at varying temperatures and substrate availability conditions to detect persist...
Thermal adaptations of soil microorganisms could mitigate or facilitate global warming effects on so...
Multiple lines of existing evidence suggest that increasing CO2 emission from soils in response to r...
AbstractSoil microbial communities mediate the decomposition of soil organic matter (SOM). The amoun...
Increasing temperatures can accelerate soil organic matter decomposition and release large amounts o...
Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capac...
Soil microorganisms control carbon losses from soils to the atmosphere1-3, yet their responses to cl...
Soil microorganisms control carbon losses from soils to the atmosphere, yet their responses to clima...
Soils store about four times as much carbon as plant biomass(1), and soil microbial respiration rele...
Warming-induced release of CO2 from the large carbon (C) stores in arctic soils could accelerate cli...
types: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis a post-print, author-produced version o...
Microbes are responsible for cycling carbon (C) through soils, and predicted changes in soil C stock...
Temperature change is acknowledged to have a significant effect on soil biological processes and the...
Understanding how and why soil microbial communities respond to temperature changes is important for...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Soil stores more carbon (C) than plants and atmosphere combined and it is vulnerable to increased mi...
Thermal adaptations of soil microorganisms could mitigate or facilitate global warming effects on so...
Multiple lines of existing evidence suggest that increasing CO2 emission from soils in response to r...
AbstractSoil microbial communities mediate the decomposition of soil organic matter (SOM). The amoun...
Increasing temperatures can accelerate soil organic matter decomposition and release large amounts o...
Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capac...
Soil microorganisms control carbon losses from soils to the atmosphere1-3, yet their responses to cl...
Soil microorganisms control carbon losses from soils to the atmosphere, yet their responses to clima...
Soils store about four times as much carbon as plant biomass(1), and soil microbial respiration rele...
Warming-induced release of CO2 from the large carbon (C) stores in arctic soils could accelerate cli...
types: Journal Article; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tThis a post-print, author-produced version o...
Microbes are responsible for cycling carbon (C) through soils, and predicted changes in soil C stock...
Temperature change is acknowledged to have a significant effect on soil biological processes and the...
Understanding how and why soil microbial communities respond to temperature changes is important for...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Soil stores more carbon (C) than plants and atmosphere combined and it is vulnerable to increased mi...
Thermal adaptations of soil microorganisms could mitigate or facilitate global warming effects on so...
Multiple lines of existing evidence suggest that increasing CO2 emission from soils in response to r...
AbstractSoil microbial communities mediate the decomposition of soil organic matter (SOM). The amoun...