Biogenic factors explain soil carbon in paired urban and natural ecosystems worldwide
Delgado-Baquerizo, Manuel; Garcia-Palacios, Pablo; Bradford, Mark A.; Eldridge, David J.; Berdugo, Miguel; Saez-Sandino, Tadeo; Liu, Yu-Rong; Alfaro, Fernando D.; Abades, Sebastian; Bamigboye, Adebola R.; Bastida, Felipe; Blanco-Pastor, Jose L.; Duran, Jorge; Gaitan, Juan J.; Illan, Javier G.; Grebenc, Tine; Makhalanyane, Thulani Peter; Jaiswal, Durgesh Kumar; Nahberger, Tina U.; Penaloza-Bojaca, Gabriel F.; Rey, Ana; Rodriguez, Alexandra; Siebe, Christina; Teixido, Alberto L.; Sun, Wei; Trivedi, Pankaj; Verma, Jay Prakash; Wang, Ling; Wang, Jianyong; Yang, Tianxue; Zaady, Eli; Zhou, Xiaobing; Zhou, Xin-Quan; Plaza, Cesar
Date:
2023-05
Abstract:
Urban greenspaces support multiple nature-based services, many of which depend on the amount of soil carbon (C). Yet, the environmental drivers of soil C and its sensitivity to warming are still poorly understood globally. Here we use soil samples from 56 paired urban greenspaces and natural ecosystems worldwide and combine soil C concentration and size fractionation measures with metagenomics and warming incubations. We show that surface soils in urban and natural ecosystems sustain similar C concentrations that follow comparable negative relationships with temperature. Plant productivity’s contribution to explaining soil C was higher in natural ecosystems, while in urban ecosystems, the soil microbial biomass had the greatest explanatory power. Moreover, the soil microbiome supported a faster C mineralization rate with experimental warming in urban greenspaces compared with natural ecosystems. Consequently, urban management strategies should consider the soil microbiome to maintain soil C and related ecosystem services.
Description:
DATA AVAILABILITY :
The raw data associated with this study are available in https://figshare.com/s/1eadef6619e74a8f2904 (https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.21025615).