학술논문

The effect of compost on carbon cycling and the active soil microbiota
Document Type
Conference
Author
Source
Conference: American Geophysical Union's 47th annual Fall Meeting, San Francisco, CA, 12/15 - 12/19/2014
Subject
54 ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES
99 GENERAL AND MISCELLANEOUS Greenhouse gas emissions, ecosystem, Fluorescence Activitated Cell Sorting, FACS, 16S
Greenhouse gas emissions, ecosystem, Fluorescence Activitated Cell Sorting, FACS, 16S
Language
English
Abstract
Rangelands cover an estimated 40-70percent of global landmass, approximately one-third of the landmass of the United States and half of California. The soils of this vast land area has high carbon (C) storage capacity, which makes it an important target ecosystem for the mitigation of greenhouse gas emission and effects on climate change, in particular under land management techniques that favor increased C sequestration rates. While microbial communities are key players in the processes responsible for C storage and loss in soils, we have barely shed light on these highly complex processes in part due to the tremendous and seemingly intractable diversity of microbes, largely uncultured, that inhabit soil ecosystems. In our study, we compare Mediterranean grassland soil plots that were amended with greenwaste compost in a single event 6 years ago. Subsampling of control and amended plots was performed in depth increments of 0-10 cm. We present data on greenhouse gas emissions and budgets of carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and micronutrients in dependence of compost amendment. Changes in the active members of the soil microbial community were assessed using a novel approach combining flow cytometry and 16S tag sequencing disclosing who is active. This is the first study revealing the nature of actively metabolizing microbial community members linked to the geochemical characteristics of compost-amended soil.