Aboveground Productivity Shapes the Active Soil Microbiome Across China

  • Jieying Wang
  • , Fazhu Zhao
  • , Liyuan He
  • , Xiaofeng Xu
  • , Zhenghu Zhou
  • , Chengjie Ren
  • , Guiyao Zhou
  • , Yaoxin Guo
  • , Jun Wang
  • , Sha Zhou
  • , Manuel Delgado-Baquerizo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Soil microbes are the planet's most abundant, diverse, and functionally vital organisms, yet only a small portion of these microbes actively drive soil processes. While resource availability is known to influence microbial physiological traits under multiple soil processes, how aboveground resource input structures the spatial distribution of the soil active microbiome remains virtually unknown. Here, we report the results from a continental standardized soil sampling at 601 sites across major biomes in China. We measured the proportion of the active microbiome (SAM%) using 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride (CTC) staining by flow cytometry and simultaneously evaluated their main environmental drivers. On average, < 2% of all microbes constitute the active soil microbiome. Forests supported the most active soil microbiomes (> 2%), while cropland harbored the lowest (< 1%). Aboveground productivity, peaking in tropical warmer and wetter regions, was the major environmental factor explaining variation in the active soil microbiome. Our study suggests that a less productive planet may result in drastic reductions in the active soil microbiome with consequences for supporting ecosystem function and biogeochemical cycles under climate change.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70497
JournalGlobal Change Biology
Volume31
Issue number9
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025

Funding

This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42277284), Shaanxi Province 2024 Key R&D Plan (2024SF‐YBXM‐543), Qinling Hundred Talents Project of Shaanxi Academy of Science (2024K‐31), the 2025 central government to guide local science and technology development in Qinghai Province (No. 2025ZY007), and the China Scholarship Council (202306970056). This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 42277284), Shaanxi Province 2024 Key R&D Plan (2024SF‐YBXM‐543), Qinling Hundred Talents Project of Shaanxi Academy of Science (2024K‐31), the 2025 central government to guide local science and technology development in Qinghai Province (No. 2025ZY007), and the China Scholarship Council (202306970056). Funding:

Keywords

  • aboveground productivity
  • active soil microbiome
  • biomes
  • nationwide
  • soil mineral protection

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