Long-term soil warming decreases fungal biomass and alters fungal but not bacterial communities in a temperate forest

Autor(en)
Mohammad Rahmat Ullah, Steve Kwatcho Kengdo, Derek Peršoh, Ye Tian, Jakob Heinzle, Carolina Urbina Malo, Chupei Shi, Tillmann Lueders, Christian Poll, Wolfgang Wanek, Andreas Schindlbacher, Werner Borken
Abstrakt

Long-term soil warming may alter microbial community structure and functioning in forest soils, thereby affecting carbon and nutrient cycling processes. We examined the effects of >14 years of soil warming (+4 °C during snow-free seasons) on the fungal biomass marker ergosterol, and on fungal and bacterial communities in a spruce dominated mountain forest in the Austrian Alps. Soil warming decreased ergosterol, and the ergosterol-to-microbial biomass carbon (MBC) ratio at 0-10 and 10-20 cm soil depth, with a stronger decline in ergosterol, indicating a higher sensitivity of fungi than bacteria to long-term warming. Warming also shifted the fungal community at both soil depths, favoring Boletus luridus , an ectomycorrhizal (ECM) fungus, which emerged as the dominant OTU in warmed plots. The dominance of ECM over saprotrophic fungi (SAP) under warming at topsoil likely resulted from increased fine root production and enhanced competition for substrates and nutrients. Bacterial abundance and community composition remained mostly unaffected at both depths, likely due to their greater resilience to elevated temperatures and their high taxonomic diversity. Our findings therefore suggest that long-term warming primarily affects fungal community composition and functional traits, thereby enhancing the contribution of ECM with fine roots to the carbon cycle in the calcareous forest soil.

Organisation(en)
Department für Mikrobiologie und Ökosystemforschung
Externe Organisation(en)
Universität Bayreuth, Bundesforschungs- und Ausbildungszentrum für Wald, Naturgefahren und Landschaft (BFW), Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität Hannover, University of Amsterdam (UvA), Universität Hohenheim
Journal
Soil Biology and Biochemistry
Band
216
Seiten
1-11
Anzahl der Seiten
11
ISSN
0038-0717
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.soilbio.2026.110120
Publikationsdatum
02-2026
Peer-reviewed
Ja
ÖFOS 2012
106022 Mikrobiologie, 106026 Ökosystemforschung
Schlagwörter
ASJC Scopus Sachgebiete
Microbiology, Soil Science
Link zum Portal
https://ucrisportal.univie.ac.at/de/publications/64888bf6-8851-4e42-8c12-d7aaf2842719