Arctic soil carbon (C) stocks are threatened by the rapidly advancing global warming. In addition to temperature, increasing amounts of leaf litter fall following from the expansion of deciduous shrubs and trees in northern ecosystems may alter biogeochemical cycling of C and nutrients. Our aim was to assess how factorial warming and litter addition in a long-term field experiment on a subarctic heath affect resource limitation of soil microbial communities (measured by thymidine and leucine incorporation techniques), net growing-season mineralization of nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P), and carbon turnover (measured as changes in the pools during a growing-season-long field incubation of soil cores in situ). The mainly N limited bacterial c...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Warming will likely stimulate Arctic primary production, but also soil C and N mineralization, and i...
Climate warming is expected to have particularly strong effects on tundra and boreal ecosystems, yet...
Climatic warming leads to the expansion of deciduous shrubs and trees in the Arctic. This leads to h...
Global warming in the Arctic may alter decomposition rates in Arctic soils and therefore nutrient av...
Soil microorganisms regulate the decomposition of organic matter. However, microbial activities can ...
Tundra regions are projected to warm rapidly during the coming decades. The tundra biome holds the l...
Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capac...
Vegetation change of the Arctic tundra due to global warming is a well-known process, but the implic...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Vegetation change of the Arctic tundra due to global warming is a well-known process, but the implic...
Half the global soil carbon (C) is held in high-latitude systems. Climate change will expose these t...
Despite the importance of Arctic soils in the global carbon cycle, we know very little of the impact...
1. Climate warming increases the cover of deciduous shrubs in arctic ecosystems and herbivory is als...
Soil microbial biomass in arctic heaths has been shown to be largely unaffected by treatments simula...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Warming will likely stimulate Arctic primary production, but also soil C and N mineralization, and i...
Climate warming is expected to have particularly strong effects on tundra and boreal ecosystems, yet...
Climatic warming leads to the expansion of deciduous shrubs and trees in the Arctic. This leads to h...
Global warming in the Arctic may alter decomposition rates in Arctic soils and therefore nutrient av...
Soil microorganisms regulate the decomposition of organic matter. However, microbial activities can ...
Tundra regions are projected to warm rapidly during the coming decades. The tundra biome holds the l...
Increasing temperatures may alter the stoichiometric demands of soil microbes and impair their capac...
Vegetation change of the Arctic tundra due to global warming is a well-known process, but the implic...
The consequences of warming-induced ‘shrubification’ on Arctic soil carbon storage are receiving inc...
Vegetation change of the Arctic tundra due to global warming is a well-known process, but the implic...
Half the global soil carbon (C) is held in high-latitude systems. Climate change will expose these t...
Despite the importance of Arctic soils in the global carbon cycle, we know very little of the impact...
1. Climate warming increases the cover of deciduous shrubs in arctic ecosystems and herbivory is als...
Soil microbial biomass in arctic heaths has been shown to be largely unaffected by treatments simula...
Despite the large quantity of research on the sensitivity of soil organic matter (SOM) degradation t...
Warming will likely stimulate Arctic primary production, but also soil C and N mineralization, and i...
Climate warming is expected to have particularly strong effects on tundra and boreal ecosystems, yet...