Two decades of altered snow cover does not affect soil microbial ability to catabolize carbon compounds in an oceanic alpine heath

  • E. R Jasper Wubs (Contributor)
  • Sarah J. Woodin (Contributor)
  • Marc I. Stutter (Contributor)
  • Sonja Wipf (Contributor)
  • Martin Sommerkorn (Contributor)
  • René Van Der Wal (Contributor)
  • E. R Jasper Wubs (Contributor)
  • Graeme Paton (Other)

Dataset

Description

Snow strongly affects ecosystem functioning in alpine environments with potential carry-over effects outside of snow periods. However, it is unclear whether changes in snow cover affect microbial community functioning in summer. In a field experiment, we tested whether manipulation of snow cover affected the functional capabilities of the microbial community either directly, or indirectly through concomitant changes in the vegetation. While 23 years of differential snow depth and persistence fundamentally changed the vegetation composition, the microbial community's ability to catabolize a range of carbon compounds was not altered. Instead, soil moisture content was the key driver of carbon catabolism by the microbial community.

Copyright and Open Data Licencing

CC0
Date made available1 Jan 2019
PublisherDRYAD

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